Supreme Court of India

Jagdish Prasad vs The State Of Bihar And Another on 13 February, 1974

Supreme Court of India
Jagdish Prasad vs The State Of Bihar And Another on 13 February, 1974
Equivalent citations: 1974 AIR 911, 1974 SCR (3) 369
Author: V Krishnaiyer
Bench: Krishnaiyer, V.R.
           PETITIONER:
JAGDISH PRASAD

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF BIHAR AND ANOTHER

DATE OF JUDGMENT13/02/1974

BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH

CITATION:
 1974 AIR  911		  1974 SCR  (3) 369
 1974 SCC  (4) 455
 CITATOR INFO :
 E&R	    1974 SC 917	 (10,16)
 D	    1974 SC2305	 (1)
 RF	    1975 SC 522	 (21)
 RF	    1987 SC1977	 (4)
 R	    1990 SC1597	 (19)


ACT:
Maintenance  of	 Internal Security Act	1971,  Sec.  3(1)(a)
(iii)--Order   of   detention	under	sec.   3   (1)	 (a)
(iii)--Grounds--Maintenance   of   Supplies   and   Services
essential to the community--Legality of order.
Words	and   phrases  "Supplies   and	 Services"   meaning
of--Constitution  of India, Art. 32--Practice--Petition	 for
habeas corpus--Return to Rule Nisi.
Affidavit--on behalf of State--Who should file.



HEADNOTE:
The  petitioner, a licensed wholesale dealer,  was  detained
pursuant  to  an  order	 passed u/s 33 of  the	Act  by	 the
District  Magistrate,  Ranchi for  his	antisocial  activity
prejudicial  to	 the maintenance of  supplies  and  services
essential to the community.  The particulars of the  grounds
supplied  to  him u/s 8 stated that he	was  found  secretly
transporting  50  bags	of rice in his	truck  at  mid-night
contrary  to the conditions of his wholesaler's licence	 and
that,  when  caught red handed, he gave	 false	excuses	 and
imaginary  numbers  of	licence dealers,  some	of  whom  on
verification had no current licence and all of whom disowned
the  alleged  purchases.   The	petitioner  challenged	 the
validity of the order by a petition for habeas corpus.	 The
affidavit in return filed by the State was sworn by an Upper
Division  Assistant  (Special)	Home  Department.   In	that
affidavit  the	words "and services" after  "maintenance  of
supplies", were struck off.
The  petitioner raised two contentions before this  Court  :
(i)  The  District Magistrate was uncertain whether  he	 was
detaining   the	  petitioner  to   prevent   disruption	  of
maintenance of supplies or services essential to the life of
the community and such a mindless order was bad in law. (ii)
Supplies  and Services are two distinct concepts and  though
services being disrupted was one of the precise reasons	 for
the  detention,	 no particulars which would  make  out	that
ground,	 apart	from  the  distinct  ground  of	  preventing
supplies, had been given; therefore, the order was illegal.
Dismissing the petition held
1.   The  District  Magistrate	when  passing  an  order  of
detention u/s 3 of the Act has to be fair and clear and	 not
doubtful about why he is detaining the man.  "Either or" ill
fits into s. 3. Not so, when it is cumulative.	A man may be
detained  on grounds A and B but not A or B. In the  present
case, illicit transport of food grains in the still  secrecy
of  night by one whose business licence does not  permit  it
and who gives false explanation when confronted does indulge
in  an	activity  with	impact	on  supplies  and  services.
Supplies  and stocks if hijacked by wholesalers	 upsets	 the
delicate  control scheme. go also transport and delivery  to
each  centre according to its requirements is thrown out  of
gear  by  these	 private  operations.	For  example,  Bihar
hopping	 harrowingly from drought to floods, can  ill-afford
to  have the wheels of distribution, of which  supplies	 and
services  are two facets, wobble or break down.	  Therefore,
the order of detention cannot be held to bad in economics of
law. [373 D, 377 H]
Rameshwar  Lal	v. State of Bihar [1968] 2  S.C.R.  505	 and
Prabhu	Dayal V. District Magistrate, Kamrup, W.P. No.	1946
of 1973 dated October 11, 1973, referred to.
11.  In	 interpreting  expressions  such  as  "supplies	 and
services"  basically the statutory subjects  matter  colours
the concept.  The complex needs and amenities of modern life
and  the multifarious obligations of a welfare state  mingle
supplies and services.	For example, an essential  commodity
is at once a supply and a service.  The touchstone of social
control is that it must be a
370
thing  essential  for the existence of the  community;	when
crystallised it is supplies, when sublimated it is services.
It  depends in most cases on the angle from which  you	view
and  the  lens you use.	 There can be no  dichotomy  between
"supplies  and services" in the special context of  a  State
being  called  upon in an emergency to supply  that  primary
necessity  of existence, viz., food, which' is	perhaps	 the
basic  service which Government must render to	the  people.
In the present case, the allegation is of nocturnal, illegal
rice  transport intercepted by officials and no violence  is
done to language to describe that activity as prejudicial to
supplies and services.	Rushing food supplies to a nation in
hunger	is  a composite operation of supplies  and  services
essential to the life of the community and the order is	 not
bad because it telescopes both.	 An intelligent fore-,	cast
made by the District Magistrate that the detenu would  break
the  control'  system  and blackmarket	in  rice  cannot  be
castigated as irrational. [372 C-H, 376 F]
Ram  Manohar  Lohia v. State of Bihar and another  [1966]  1
S.C.R. 709, Prabhu Dayal v. Dist.  Magistrate, Kamrup,	W.P.
No. 1496 of 1973 dt. 11-10-73 and Keshav Talpade v.  Emperor
A.I.R. 1943 F.C.R. 1, 8 distinguished on facts.
III. (obiter dicta)
It  is difficult to appreciate why in return to a rule	nisi
in  the	 habeas	 corpus motion, it is  not  thought  serious
enough even where liberty of a citizen is choked off, to get
the   District	 Magistrate  to	  explain   his	  subjective
satisfaction  and the grounds therefor.	 Not even why he  is
not  available,	 nor  the next best, the oath  of  a  senior
officer in the Secretariat who had been associated with	 the
handling  of  the  case	 at  Government	 level.	  Mechanical
affidavits,  miniaturising the files into a few	 paragraphs,
by  some one handy in the Secretariat cannot be regarded  as
satisfactory.  This is not a mere punctilio of procedure but
a probative requirement of substance.  T373 B]
The  above  observations stand only as obiter dicta  in	 the
present	 case since counsel made no point about this  aspect
of  the	 affidavit.  However, in a  subsequent	judgment  in
Mohd.	Alam  v. State of West Bengal, W.P. Nos.  1678	and'
1855/1973  dt.	14-2-74, this Court comprised  of  the	same
Bench  has specifically laid down that the proper person  to
file the counter-affidavit in return to Rule, nisi  issuedby
the Supreme Court in habeas corpus petition is the  District
Magistrate who had passed the order of detention or a senior
officer who personally dealt with the case of the detenu  in
the Government Secretariat, or had to put up the file to the
Minister for orders.



JUDGMENT:

ORIGINAL JURISDICTION : Writ Petition No. 1972 of 1973.
Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India for the issue
of Writ in the nature of habeas corpus.

Frank Anthony and S. K. Gambhir, for the petitioner.
K. K. Sinha and S. K. Sinha, for the respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by.
KRISHNA IYER, J. The petitioner detained by the order of the
District Magistrate for anti-social proclivity prejudicial
to the maintenance of supplies and services essential to the
community challenges its validity in this petition for
habeas corpus.

Mr. Frank Anthony has vigorously urged two vital defects as
vitiating the detention order incarcerating the petitioner,
based mainly on the, unreported ruling of this Court in
Prabhu Dayal v. District Magistrate, Kamrup(1), the well-
known Lohia(2) case and a few other peripheral
(1) W. P. No. 1496 of 1973; judgment dated October 11,
1973.

(2) A. I. R. 1960 S. C. 633.

371

observations in other decisions. The District Magistrate
was uncertain whether he would detain the petitioner to
prevent disruption of maintenance of supplies or of services
essential to the life of the community and such a mindless
order suffered from a fatal genetic disease diagnosed by
this Court in many decisions as fatal, runs the submission.
Now, the admitted facts and the authoritative law and their
interaction. It is best to begin with the impugned order
itself which reads
“No. 1182/C dated, the 9th October, 1973.
Whereas I am satisfied that with a view to
preventing Shri Jagdish Prasad, Proprietor M/s
Lachmi Bhandar, North Market Road, Upper
Bazar, Ranchi, from acting in any manner
prejudicial to the maintenance of supplies and
services essential to the community, it is
necessary to make an order that he be de-

tained. Now, therefore, in exercise of the
powers conferred by Sub-section (2) of the
Section 3 of the Maintenance of Internal
Security Act, 1971 (No. 26 of 1971), 1 hereby
direct that the said Shri Jagdish Prasad be
detained.

He shall be treated in detention in Ranchi
Jail and classified as Class Y and in division
IB.

(S. N. Sinha)
District Magistrate, Ran-.hi.”

The executive interdict on the trader’s
freedom is issued to inhibit his acting in any
manner prejudicial to the maintenance of
supplies and services essential to the
community. The semantics of ‘supplies’ and
‘services’ in this context, argued Sri
Anthony, serves to show that certain
activities bear upon supplies only, e.g.,
hoarding or blackmarketing, while other
actings may disrupt services only
, e.g.,
sabotage of railway tracks or scavenger’s
strike. He argued that some misconduct may be
ambidextral as for example, huge quantities of
telegraph wires being poached or a railway
wagon being looted in an organised manner.
The cornerstone of his contention, in the
first stage, is that blackmarketing in
foodgrains belongs to the first species-
essential supplies-and not to the second-
essential services In Rameshwar Lal v. State
of Bihar(1) this Court pointed out :

“No doubt blackmarketing has at its base a
shortening of supplies because blackmarket
flourishes best when the availability of
commodities is rendered difficult. It has a
definite tendency to disrupt supplies when
scarcity exists or scarcity is created
artificially by hoarding to attain
illegitimate profits. Indulging in
blackmarketing is conduct which is prejudicial
to the maintenance of supplies. It is hardly
necessary to read supplies conjunctively with
services, as was contended although cases may
exist where supplies and services may both be
affected. The word ‘and’ is not used
conjunctively but disjunctively. If sweepers
strike, no question of disrupting sup-

(1) [1968]2 S. C. R. 505.

372

plies arises but services essential to the
life of the community will certainly be
disrupted.”

he familiar imagery in Lohia’s case of concentric circles
in the context of Law and Order (the larger circle) and
public order (the smaller but graver one) was projected here
with a little readjustment. Similies and metaphors land
literary grace to legal argument but are apt to play tricks
in areas of strict logic or cold law. Courts have to be
cautious while transplanting picturesque projections from
one situation to another. So let us take an independent
close-up of the profiles of essential ,supplies’ and
‘services’ to discover common morphology and divergent
features. Basically, the statutory subject-matter colours
the concept. Counsel traced the pedigree of the Act, with
special reference to essential supplies and services, to
substantiate his thesis of compartmentalisation and marginal
overlapping. May be, counsel is right in his contention
that all supplies are not services and all services are not
supplies but the complex needs and amenities of modern life
and the multifarious obligations of a welfare state mingle
supplies and services so much that the concentric circle
geometry becomes a misleading stroke of conceptualism in
this jural area. For example, an essential commodity is at
once a supply and a service. Section 36(3) of the Defence
of India Rules, 1971 defines it to mean
“essential commodity” means food, water, fuel, light, power
or any other thing essential for the existence of the
community which is notified in this behalf by Government;”
“Light and power” thus are commodities; so also food and
water. Yet who will deny that light is a service or
drinking water, for that matter ? The touchstone of social
control is that it must be a thing essential for the
existence of the community; when crystallised it is
supplies, when sublimated it is services. It depends in
most cases an the angle from which you view and the lens you
use. Food is supplies, so is shipping and wagons, kerosine
and gasoline. And yet they are services. At a feeding
centre for starving children you supply food, serve gruel.
In other words, food is supplies, feeding is services. In
Blackpool Corporation v. Lovkar(1) it was held that
providing housing accommodation fell within the scope of
“supplies and services” in Regulation 51 (1) of the Defence
(General) Regulation, 1939. We see no force in the
dichotomy between the two attempted by counsel in the
special context of a State being called upon in. an
emergency to supply that primary necessity of existence,
viz., food, which is perhaps the basic service which
Government must render to the people. In the present case,
the allegation is of nocturnal, illegal, rice transport,
intercepted by officials, and you do no violence to language
to describe that activity as prejudicial to supplies and
services. Anyway, rushing food supplies to a nation in
hunger is a composite operation of supplies and services
essential to the life of the community and the order is not
bad because it telescopes both.

Shri Anthony relied on the mental vacillation of the
detaining officer as disclosed in the affidavit in return
filed by the State where ‘and services’ is struck off after
“maintenance of supplies”. If this reflects the
(1) [1948] 1 K.B, 349.

373

slippery satisfaction of the District Magistrate it is
unfortunate. Here some Upper Division Assistant (Special),
Home Department, has sworn an affidavit, not with personal
knowledge but with paper wisdom. It is difficult to
appreciate why in return to a rule nisi in a habeas corpus
motion, it is not thought serious enough even where liberty
of a citizen is choked off, to get the District Magistrate
to explain his subjective satisfaction and the grounds
therefor. Not even why he is not available, not the next
best, the oath of a senior officer in the Secretariat who
had been associated with the handling of the case at
Government level. Mechanical affidavits, miniaturising the
files into a few paragraphs, by some one handy in the
Secretariat cannot be regarded as satisfactory. This is not
a mere punctilio of procedure but a probative requirement of
substance. However, in this case, counsel made no point
about this aspect of the affidavit because the relevant
material recited in the detention order is almost admitted
in the petitioner’s averments. Even so, the curious
striking off in the affidavit of one ground relied on by the
District Magistrate in his order is obscure.
Had the authority used one or other of the grounds in the
alternative, such for example as ‘public order’ or ‘security
of State’ or ‘maintenance of supplies’, it would have failed
in law. Ile has to be firm and clear and not doubtful about
why he is detaining the man. ‘Either or’ ill fits into s.3.
Not so, when it is cumulative. A man may be detained on
grounds A and B but not A or B. Here, the cumulative, not
the alternative, is the tenor of the order. Had it been
otherwise due care would stand negatived and the order would
fail. Fundamental rights are fundamental and administrative
indifference is impermissible to encroach beyond the strict
lines of the law. Rameshwar Lal(1) elicited some stern
observations from Hidayatullah, J., as he then was. The
learned Judge said :

“However, the detention of a person without a trial, merely
on the subjective satisfaction of an authority however high,
is a serious matter. It must require the closest scrutiny
of the material on which the decision is formed, leaving no
room for errors or at least avoidable errors. The very
reason that the courts do not consider the reasonableness of
the opinion formed or the sufficiency of the material on
which it is based, indicates the need for the greatest
circumspection on the part of those who wield this power
over others. Since the detenu is not placed before a
Magistrate and has only a right of being supplied the
grounds of detention with a view to his making a
representation to the Advisory Board, the grounds must not
be vague or indefinite and must afford a real opportunity to
make a representation against the detention. Similarly, if
a vital ground is shown to be, non-existing so that it could
not have and ought not to have played a part in the material
for consideration, the court may attach some importance to
this fact.”

The present case hardly fails for this reason since
particulars of grounds are given which cover supplies and
services to the community, prejudice to which is the
rationale stated in the order. But it is con-
(1) [1968] 2 S.C.R. 505.

374

tended that the particulars furnished relate to supplies
only and how services are affected is left vague. If one
ground is vague, the order fails. In Rameshwar Lal(1) it
was pointed out :

” where some grounds are found to be non are cancelled or
given up, the detention cannot be justified …. if the
grounds are not sufficiently precise and do not furnish
details for the purpose of making effective representation
the detention can be questioned.”

In this connection, Shri Anthony forcefully urged his case
that services being disrupted was one of the precise reasons
for the detention, but no particulars which would make out
that ground, apart from the distinct ground of preventing
supplies, have been given. On the reasoning in Prabhu Dayal
the order is illegal, he argued.

Mathew, J., brought out the fatal flaw in Prabhu Dayal thus
“The fact that one of the grounds mentions that paddy and
rice had been unearthed and seized from the unauthorised
possession of the petitioners from the rice mill in question
on the date of the detention order would not necessarily
lead to the inference that the petitioners have been
indulging in unauthorized milling of paddy, much less that
they were smuggling the resultant rice to Maghalaya for
earning undue profit. It cannot, therefore, be said that
the first ground, namely, that the petitioners are
responsible for unauthorised milling of paddy and smuggling
of the resultant rice to Meghalaya for earning undue profit,
is a conclusion reached from the fact of seizure of paddy
and rice on 25-7-1973 or the seizure of rice on 16-5-1972
from their unauthorized possession at Messrs. Srinivas
Basudeo, Fancy Bazar, Gauhati.”

These are not only cases where one of the grounds of de-
tention was vague, but also cases where the detaining autho-
rity did not apply its mind at all to one of the grounds of
detention. If the detaining authority had no particulars
before it as regards the smuggling operation how was it
possible for it to have been satisfied that the petitioners
were smuggling rice to Meghalaya for earning undue profit ?
If there was any particular instance of smuggling of the
kind in the mind of the detaining authority, it would have
been possible for it to specify the particular instance at
least in the grounds.”

Reference was also made in the above case by the learned
Judge to Keshav Talpade v. Emperor(2) where it was said
“If a detaining authority gave four reasons for detaining a
man, without distinguishing between them, and any two or
three of the reasons are held to be bad, it can never be
certain to what extent the bad reasons operated on the mind
of the
(1) [1969] 2 S.C.R. 505.

(2) A.I.R. 1943 F.C.R.1,8.

375.
authority or whether the detention order would have been
made at all if only one or two good reasons had been before
them.”

The law is thus indubitable that if one ground is vague of
denuded’ of any detail the order, even if other good grounds
exist, is bad. The sole enquiry then is whether in
substance no material has been set out here from which a
rational inference regarding perverting services to the
community has been given at all, as happened in Prabhu
Dayal(1), case. We demur.

The order detailing grounds of detention reads thus
“In pursuance of section 8 of the Maintenance of Internal
Security Act, 1971 (No. 26 of 1971), Shri Jagdish Prasad,
Proprietor M/s Lachmi Bhandar, North Market Road, Upper
Bazar, Ranchi is informed that he has been ordered to be de-
tained in my order No. 1182/C dated 9th October, 73 on the
following grounds –

1. That you on 2-10-72 at about 12 O’Clock at night were
transporting 50 bags of rice weighing on truck No. BRV 6627
which was checked by the Sub-Divisional Magistrate, Sadar,
Ranchi.

2. That you produced at the time of checking cash memo
book and you asserted that out of 50 bags of rice seized oil
the said truck, 15 bags of rice were sold to Biswanath Floor
Mill, Khelari, 10 bags of rice to Pramod Floor Mill, Khelari
and 10 bags to Shri Kundanlal Khelari.

3. That in support of your assertion as stated in Para No.
2 above, you produced Cash memo No. 1134 dated 2-10-73
showing sale of 15 bags of rice to M/s Biswanath Flour Mill,
Khelari and you mentioned licence Number of M/s Biswanath
Flour as 34/69 (R) On verification by a Magistrate 1st
Class, Ranchi, at Khelari from Shri Jagi Ram, Proprietor of
M/s Biswanath Flour Mill, Khelari, it has been established
that the licence number of the firm is 63/68 and not 34/69.
Shri Jagi Ram has also asserted that he did not purchase any
rice from you or from any other place on 2-10-73.

4. That similarly in support of assertion as stated in
Para 2 above, you produced Cash memo No. 1135 dated 2-10-73
showing sale of 10 bags of rice to M/s Pramod Flour Mill of
Khelari showing their licence number as 31/68 (R). On ac-
tual verification at Khalari by a Magistrate 1st Class,
Ranchi, from Shri Bhagwan Singh, Proprietor of M/s Pramod
Flour Mill, Khelari it has been established that the licence
of M/s Pramod Flour Mill, Khelari is 9/72 and not 31/69. It
has also been established that M/s Pramod Flour Mill,
Khelari had no license in 1969. It has also been
established that on 2-10-73 M/s Flour Mill Khelari did not
make any purchase of rice from you or from any other shop.
(1) W.P. 1496 of 1973; Judgment dated October 11, 1973.

376

5. That similarly in support of your assertion as stated
in Para No. 2 above, you produced cash memo No. 1137 dated
2-10-73 showing sale of 10 bags of rice. to Shri Kundan Lal
of Khelari showing his licence number as 26/67(R). On
actual verification at Khelari by a Magistrate 1st Class,
Ranchi, from Shri Kundan Lal of Khelari it has been estab-
lished that Shri Kundan Lal of Khelari has got no foodgrain
dealer’s licence, nor he deals in foodgrains. It has also
been established that the said Kundan Lal of Khelari did not
purchase any rice from you on 2-10-73.

In the circumstances I am satisfied that it he is allowed to
remain at large, he will indulge in activities prejudicial
to the maintenance of supplies and services essential to the
community for prevention of such activities I consider his
detention necessary. . . . ”

He who runs and reads will be satisfied, if the statements
are true, it is not for the Court to investigate the
veracity of these averments that prolix particulars are
communicated about the midnight movement of 50 bags of rice-
a clandestine misadventure contrary to the conditions of
this wholesaler’s licence-and, when challenged, reeled off
imaginary numbers of licences of dealers some of whom, on
verification, had no current licence and all of whom had
disowned the alleged purchases. May be, the petitioner has
a good defence but the imprisonment is preventive and not
punitive, the conclusion is based on the executive’s
subjective satisfaction, not the court’s objective
assessment. Even the admitted facts are tell-tale. The
petitioner is a licensed wholesale dealer. He can carry on
his business only at a place mentioned in his licence and
not do transport and sale outside those premises. He can
sell only to a wholesale or retail merchant holding a per-
mit. He shall issue ‘to every customer a correct receipt
giving the name, address and licence number of the customer’
and other details and keep a duplicate of the same. On the
recitals in the annexure to the order, the petitioner has,
in violation of all these safeguards, attempted to run the
gauntlet of the law. An intelligent forecast made by the
District Magistrate that the detenu would break the control
system and blackmarket in rice cannot be castigated as
irrational. The argument is that all this is germane to
supplies, not services. Therefore, as earlier explained,
the whole order breaks down.

We do not dismiss this argument as merely technical or
procedural for the eloquent reason given by Mathew, J., if
we may say, with deep deference in Prabhu Dayal’s case :
“The facts of the case might induce mournful reflection how
an honest attempt by an authority charged with the duty of
taking prophylactic measure to secure the maintenance of
supplies and services essential to the community has been
frustrated by what is popularly called a technical error.
We say and we think it is necessary to repeat, that the
gravity of the evil to the community resulting from anti-
social activities can never furnish an adequate reason for
377
invading the personal liberty of a citizen, except in
accordance with the procedure established by the
Constitution and the laws. The history of personal liberty
is largely the history of insistence on observance of proce-
dure. Observance of procedure has been the bastion against
wanton assaults on personal liberty over the years. Under
our Constitution, the only guarantee of personal liberty for
a person is that he shall not be deprived of it except in
accordance with the procedure established by law. The need
today for maintenance of supplies and services essential to
the community cannot be over-emphasised. There will be no
social security without maintenance of adequate supplies and
services essential to the community. But social security is
not the only goal of good society. There are other values
in a society. Our country is taking singular pride in the
democratic ideals in personal liberty. It would indeed be
ironic if, in the name of social security, we would sanction
the subversion of this liberty. We do not pause to consider
whether social security is more precious than personal
liberty in the scale of values. For, any judgment as
regards that would be but a value judgment on which opinions
might differ. But whatever be its impact on the maintenance
of supplies and services essential to the community, when a
certain procedure is prescribed by the Constitution or the
Laws for depriving a citizen of his personal liberty, we
think it our duty to see that procedure is rigorously
observed, however strange this might sound to some ears.”
Part IV of the Constitution projects a value judgment which
some, jurists have interpreted to mean that in the hierarchy
of human rights the right to life ranks highest and if the
liberty of the few starve the life of the many the jural
order may break down, an aspect on which we do not now need
to speak.

The position of law is plain but does not apply here. We
have, been at pains to explain that illicit transport of
foodgrains in the still secrecy of night by one whose
business license does not permit it and who gives false
excuses when confronted, does indulge in an activity with
impact on supplies and services. Supplies and stocks, if
hijacked by wholesalers, upsets the delicate control scheme.
SO also transport and delivery to each centre according to
its requirements thrown out of gear by these private
operations. And Bihar, hopping harrowingly from drought to
floods, can ill-afford to have the wheels
378
of distribution, of which supplies and services are two
facets, wobble or break down. Anyway, we cannot hold the
order bad, in economics or law.

Counsel referred to the quantity being but 50 bags of rice-
too small to thwart supplies to the community. While that
is of little avail legally, it suggests cynically that
larger black-marketers are easy in their bosom while
deserving to be behind bars. That is not our pro vince as
judges, and our views as citizens are out of place.
In conclusion, we would like to express concern at prolonged
detentions without trial without periodical review of each
individual case in changing circumstances. The petition
fails and is dismissed.

S. B. W. Petition dismissed.

379