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1987 Supreme(Ker) 321

Judges : MALIMATH,BHASKARAN NAMBIAR
UMMAYAU - Appellant
Versus
UNION OF INDIA - Respondent
Case No : O.P. No.5973 of 1987-S
Decided On : 07/23/1987
Advocates Appeared :
T.P.K. Nambiar; M.A. Manhu; V.V. Narayanan; For Petitioner P. V. Madhavan Nambiar; Government Pleader; For Respondents

Non-Indian citizens applying for Indian citizenship have no legal right to stay in India during the pendency of their application, and the court should not interfere to prevent their deportation.

Headnote:

Habeas Corpus - Deportation of Non-Indian Citizen - Legal provisions regarding deportation and acquisition of Indian citizenship were considered by the court in reaching its decision

Fact of the Case:

The petitioner sought a writ of habeas corpus for her husband who was taken into custody by the police for deportation to Pakistan due to overstaying. The husband had applied for Indian citizenship, but it was rejected, and he had no legal right to stay in India during the pendency of the application.

Finding of the Court:

The court found that the husband, being a Pakistani citizen, had no legal right to stay in India during the pendency of his application for Indian citizenship, and therefore, the petition for habeas corpus was dismissed.

Issues: The main issue was whether the husband, a non-Indian citizen, could be deported to Pakistan while his application for Indian citizenship was pending.

Ratio Decidendi: The court held that a person who is not an Indian citizen and has applied for Indian citizenship has no legal right to stay in India during the pendency of the application, and therefore, the court should not interfere to prevent deportation in such cases.

Final Decision: The Original Petition for habeas corpus was dismissed.

Judgment :-

1. This petition is for the issue of a writ in the nature of habeas corpus in respect of the petitioner's husband Moolakkalil Ummerkutty, son of Mommad. It is her case that he has been taken in to custody by the police on the 21st of this month on the ground chat he is a Pakistani national who has overstayed in this country and that therefore it is necessary to deport him to Pakistan. The principal contention of Sri. Manhu, the learned counsel for the petitioner, is that application has been made by Moolakkilil Ummerkutty under S.5(1) of the Indian Citizenship Act, 1955 for acquiring Indian citizenship, that the said application is still pending and if in the meanwhile deportation is given effect to his right to acquire Indian citizenship will stand defeated. There are also averments in the petition to the effect that he has been staying in this country for several years, that he has married the petitioner and has a couple of children. But it is an admitted fact that Moolakkalil Ummerkutly was in Pakistan, asserted his rights as a Pakistani citizen, enrolled himself as a member of the Naval force of Pakistan and retired from the said service. It is also an admitted fact that he bad made application under S.9(2) of the Indian Citizenship Act, 1955 wherein he had requested the Government of India to determine his status as an Indian citizen, and that the said application has been rejected holding that he is not an Indian citizen. It is also an admitted fact that he was given some time for staying in this country and that that period has long back expired. In his representation Ext. P1 he has inter alia stated in para 4 that during the Indo-Pakistan war of 1965 when he was about to be arrested by the Pakistan CID police accusing him to be an Indian spy he surreptitiously escaped to Muscat in an Arab Launch leaving his movable belongings and foregoing his military pension never to return to that land, Pakistan. These facts make it abundantly clear that he was a Pakistani citizen and served Pakistan Navy. It is also clear from his own ' statement that on his own showing he surreptitiously escaped to Muscat when he was suspected to be a spy. We would like to make it clear that a person who makes an application for grant of Indian citizenship under S.5(1) of the Act has no legal right to stay in this country until the disposal of that application. Consequently it follows that merely on the ground that an application under S.5(1) is pending, this Court should not interfere under Art.226 of the Constitution and prevent his deportation. The considerations that weigh with us in a petition for habeas corpus when an application under S.9(2) of the Indian Citizenship Act is pending are different from those that arise in respect of a person whose application under S.5(1) for acquiring Indian citizenship is pending consideration. When an application under S.9(2) is pending, normally this Court directs that the applicant shall not be deported pending consideration of that application, for, it would be contrary to law to deport a person who is a citizen of this country. Until that determination is made, in normal circumstances it would not be reasonable and fair to deport such a person as it may ultimately turn out that he is an Indian citizen in which case his deportation will be clearly illegal. That would not be the position in respect of a person who is admittedly not an Indian citizen and who has made an application for acquiring Indian citizenship under S.5(1) of the Act. As the application under S.5 can only proceed on the basis that he is not an Indian citizen it is obvious that be has no legal right unless permission is granted to him to stay in this country, to insist that he should not be deported. If the contention that during the pendency of the application under S.5(1) deportation should not be permitted and this Court should interfere is accepted it would lead to disastrous situations affecting the integrity and safet

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