Kuso Sah vs The State Of Bihar & Ors on 8 November, 1973

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Supreme Court of India
Kuso Sah vs The State Of Bihar & Ors on 8 November, 1973
Equivalent citations: 1974 AIR 156, 1974 SCR (2) 195
Author: Y Chandrachud
Bench: Chandrachud, Y.V.
           PETITIONER:
KUSO SAH

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF BIHAR & ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT08/11/1973

BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V.
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V.
DWIVEDI, S.N.
GOSWAMI, P.K.

CITATION:
 1974 AIR  156		  1974 SCR  (2) 195
 1974 SCC  (1) 185
 CITATOR INFO :
 RF	    1975 SC1215	 (5)
 R	    1987 SC 998	 (6)


ACT:
Constitution  of  India	 Art.  32-Habeas   Corpus-Petitioner
detained  for two reasons : maintenance of public order	 and
maintenance  of essential supplies and services-Two  out  of
three  grounds in respect of first reason found	 irrelevant-
Held entire order of detention is illegal as the two reasons
cannot be bifurcated.



HEADNOTE:
The  petitioner	 was  detained	pursuant  to  an  order	  of
detention  dated  April	 2  1973  passed  by  the   District
Magistrate,   Monghyr,	with  a	 view  to   preventing	 the
petitioner  from  "acting in any manner prejudicial  to	 the
maintenance of public order and the maintenance' of supplies
and  services  essential to the community." The	 grounds  of
detention  served on the petitioner on April 6,	 1973`	were
divided	 into two parts, the first relating to public  order
and the second to essential supplies and services.  Two	 out
of  the	 three grounds mentioned in the first part  set	 out
facts  which referred respectively to a stray incident on  a
public	street	and an assault on a  public.  servant.	 The
petitioners  challenged the order of detention by  a  habeas
corpus petition in this Court.
Allowing the Petition,
HELD  :	 (1) The two concepts law and  order'  'and  'public
order'	have well defined contours.  Stray  and	 unorganised
crimes of theft and assault are not matters of public  order
since  they  do not fend to affect the even flow  of  public
life.	Infractions of law we bound in some measure to	lead
to disorder but every infraction of law does not necessarily
result	in  public disorder.  "Law and order  comprehends  &
orders of less gravity than these affecting "public  order",
just as public order, comprehends disorders of less  gravity
than those affecting "security of State.    [196G]
Pushkar	 Mukherjee  and others v. The State of	West  Bengal
[1969] 2 S.C.R. 635, 642 and Dr. Ram Manoher Lohia v., State
of Bihar and Others [1966] 1 S.C.R. 709, 746. referred to.
(2)Two of the grounds on which the order of detention  rests
bear  no  rational connection with "public  order",  in	 the
interests   of	which  the  petitioner was  ordered  to	 be
detained.   The order of detention expressly states that  it
was passed with a view to preventing the petitioner    from.
acting	in  a  manner	prejudicial to	the  maintenance  of
public	order  and the maintenance of supplies	and  service
essential to the community, and the District Magistrate	 was
satisfied   that if the petitioner was allowed to remain  at
large  he  will indulge in activities	prejudicial  to	 the
maintenance of public order and	  maintence of supplies	 and
services  essential  to	 the  community.   The	two  reasons
maintenance of public order and maintenance of supplies	 and
services  essential  to the community  cannot  therefore  be
bifurcated  and	 considered in	separate  compartments.	 The
subjective satisfaction of the detaining authority  embraces
both  the  reasons and since two out of	 the  three  grounds
mentioned in the first part are irrelevant, the entire order
is illegal. [179D, 198D]
Pushkar Mukherjee & Ors.  V, The State of West Bengal [1969]
2 S.C.R. 635, 642 and Motilal Jain v. State of Bihar &	Ors.
[1968] 3 S.C.R, 587, 593, referred to.



JUDGMENT:

ORlGINAL JURISDICTION : Writ Petition No. 1607 of. 1973.
Under.Article 32 of the Constitution for issue of a Writ in
the nature of habeas corpus.

196

P. K. Chatterjee and Rathin Das, for the petitioner.
K. K. Sinha and S. K. Sinha for the, respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
CHANDRACHUD J.-By this petition for the, writ of ha as
corpus, the petitioner challenges an order of detention
dated April 2, 1973 passed by the District Magistrate,
Monghyr with a view to preventing the petitioner from
“acting in any manner prejudicial to the maintenance of
public order and the maintenance of supplies and services
essential to the community
The grounds of detention served on the petitioner on April
6, 1973 are divided into two parts, the first part referring
to acts prejudicial to the maintenance of public order and
the second to those prejudicial to the maintenance of
supplies and services essential to the community.
Two out of the three grounds mentioned in the first part
read thus
“(b) On 20-1-71 at about 2 A.M. he and his
brother, Garib Sao were leading two trucks
with stolen Railway property in a car bearing
No. WBJ 6949. On the railway crossing near
Jamui Rly. Station other,, standing trucks on
the road caused a bottleneck in his hurried
journey. This led to a clash and his men
assaulted the truck drivers and threatened
them with fire arms. Some 15 of his Men were
arrested then an( there by the Police with the
help of the public while he managed to escape
along with his brother in the, car bearing No.
WBJ 6948. This car is registered in the name
of his brother Rabig Sao. A case was
registered in this connection vide Lakshmipur
P.S. Case No. 9 (1) 71 dated 20-1-71.

(c)He assaulted Shri Ram Singhasan Rai,
Asst. Suptd. Commercial Taxes, Intelligence
Branch, Bhagalpur who had gone to his factory
in course of his duties and discharge of his
legal obligations as Asst. Suptd. Commercial
Taxes Intelligence Branch and in connection
therewith he has been arrested. in Jamalpur
P.S. case No. 21 dated 29-8-72 u/s 143, 333,
307, 325 etc. I.P.C.”

These acts may raise problems of law and order but we find
it impossible to see their impact on public order. The two
concepts have well defined contours, it being well
Established that stray and unorganised crimes of theft and
assault are not matters of public order since they do not
tend to affect the even flow of public life. Infractions of
law are bound in some measure to lead to disorder but every
infraction of law does not necessarily result in public
disorder. As observed in Pushkar Mukherjee &.Ors. v. The
State of West Bengal(1), a line of demarcation must be drawn
between serious and aggravated forms of disorder which
directly affect the community or injure the public interest
and the relatively minor breaches of peace of a purely local
signi-

(1)[1969] 2 S.C.R. 635, 642.

197

ficance which primarily injure specific individuals and only
in a secondary sense public interest. ‘In Dr. Ram Manohar
Lohia v. State of Bihar and, Ors.,(1) Hidayatullah, J. has
expressed this concept picturesquely by saying that one has
to imagine three concentric circles; law and order
represents the largest circle within which is the next
circle representing public order and the smallest circle
represents the security of State. “Law and Order”.
comprehends disorders of less gravity than those affecting
“public order”, just as “public order” comprehends disorders
of less gravity than those affecting “security of State”.
The facts set out in ground (b) of the first part refer to
no more than a stray and simple fracas arising out of a
traffic bottleneck on a public street. Those set out in
ground (1) refer to an assault on a public servant,
undoubtedly reprehensible if true, but not of the kind that
would reasonably affect public order.

Thus, two of the grounds on which the order of detention
rests bear no rational connection with “public order”, in
the interests of which the petitioner was ordered to be
detained. This Court in Pushkar Mukherjee’s case observed :
“that it is well established that the constitutional
requirement that the grounds must not be vague must be
satisfied with regard to each of the grounds…… and
therefore even if one ground is vague. and the other grounds
are not vague, the detention is not in accordance with
procedures established by law and is therefore illegal. The
power to detain a person without the safeguard of a court
trial is too drastic to permit a lenient construction and
therefore courts must be astute to ensure that the detaining
authority does not transgress the limitations subject to
which alone the power can be exercised. In Motilal Jain v.
State of Bihar & OrS.
(2) this Court observed : “the
subjective satisfaction of the detaining authority must be
properly based on all the reasons on which it purports to be
based. If some out of those reasons are found to be non-
existent or irrelevant, the court cannot predicate what the
subjective satisfaction of the authority would have been on
the exclusion of those reasons. To uphold the order on the
remaining reasons would be to substitute the objective
standards of the court for the subjective satisfaction of
the authority.”

The order of detention expressly states that it was passed
with a view to preventing the petitioner from acing in a
manner prejudicial to the maintenance of public order and
the maintenance of supplies and services essential to the
community. The statement of grounds contains at the end the
assertion that the District Magistrate was satisfied that if
the petitioner was allowed to remain at large he will
indulge in acti-

(1) [1966] 1 S.C.R. 709, 746.

(2) [1968] 3 S. C. R. 587, 593.

198

vities prejudicial to the maintenance of public order and
supplies and services essential to the community. (emphasis
supplied). The two reasons, maintenance of public order and
maintenance of supplies and services essential to the,
community, cannot therefore be bifurcated and considered in
separate compartments. The subjective satisfaction of the
detaining authority embraces both the reasons and since two
out of the three grounds mentioned in the first part are
irrelevant, the entire order is illegal.
For these reason I s we set aside the order of detention.
We had earlier directed on the conclusion of the arguments
that the petitioner be set at liberty forthwith.

S.B.W.			 Petition allowed-
199



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