IN THE HIGH COURT OF ALLAHABAD
V. D. Bhargava and J. N. Takru, JJ.
STATE - Appellant
Versus
YAKUB - Respondents
. . Of .
Decided On : 07/28/1960
FOREIGNERS ACT, 1946 - SECTION 2(A), 14 - FOREIGNERS ORDER, 1948 - PARA 7 - A person who was not a foreigner at the time of his entry into India, does not become a foreigner by virtue of the amendment of the definition of foreigner in the Foreigners Laws (Amendment) Act, 1957, and is not liable for contravention of para 7 of the Foreigners Order, 1948.
Fact of the Case:
The respondent, a natural born British subject, entered India in 1954 on a Pakistani passport and Indian visa. He did not leave India by the expiry of his visa and was prosecuted under Section 14 of the Foreigners Act, 1946 for contravention of para 7 of the Foreigners Order, 1948. The trial court convicted him, but the appellate court acquitted him.
Finding of the Court:
The court held that para 7 of the Foreigners Order, 1948, which restricts the sojourn of foreigners in India, applies only to persons who are foreigners at the time of their entry into India. The respondent was not a foreigner at the time of his entry into India, and therefore para 7 did not apply to him.
Issues: Whether para 7 of the Foreigners Order, 1948 applies to a person who was not a foreigner at the time of his entry into India, but became a foreigner by virtue of the amendment of the definition of foreigner in the Foreigners Laws (Amendment) Act, 1957.
Ratio Decidendi: The court interpreted para 7 of the Foreigners Order, 1948 to be prospective in its application, meaning that it applies only to persons who are foreigners at the time of their entry into India. The court found that the respondent was not a foreigner at the time of his entry into India, and therefore para 7 did not apply to him.
Final Decision: The court dismissed the appeal and upheld the acquittal of the respondent.
( 1 ) THIS appeal by the State is directed against an appellate order of acquittal passed by the learned Sessions Judge of Moradabad. The facts giving rise to it are not in dispute, and, stated briefly, are as follows:
( 2 ) YAQUB, the respondent, was originally a resident of Moradabad. In 1947 he went away to pakistan where he remained till his entry into India on the 12th May, 1954, on the authority of a pakistan Passport No. 168008 dated the 30th January 1954 and Indian Visa of the c category No. 25804 dated 5th May 1954 - which permitted him to stay in India for three months. Subsequently that period was extended upto the 10th January 1956. The respondent, however, did not leave India by that time with the result that a notice was served on him on the 2nd October 1957 requiring him to leave India within 30 days. The respondent did not comply with that notice either. He was therefore, prosecuted under Section 14 of the foreigners Act, 1946 - hereinafter called the Act of 1946 - for the contravention of para 7 of the foreigners Order, 1948 - hereinafter called the Order of 1948 - framed under Section 3 of the act of 1946. 2a. The defence of the respondent inter alia was, that, as he was not a foreigner at the time of his entry into India, his case did not fall under para 7 of the Order of 1948 and hence he could not be convicted for the alleged contravention thereof. The trial court repelled all his pleas and convicted and sentenced him under Section 14 of the Act of 1946 to imprisonment and fine. On appeal the learned Sessions Judge reversed that Order and acquitted the respondent. Hence this appeal by the State.
( 3 ) MR. Bhatt, learned Counsel for the State, advanced two-fold contentions in support of this appeal. His first contention was that as soon as the amended definition of foreigner came into effect by virtue of Section 2 (a) of the Foreigners Laws (Amendment) Act, 1957 - hereinafter called the Amendment Act of 1957 - the respondent - whatever his status previous to that date might have been, became a foreigner to whom the provisions of para 7 of the Order of 1948 were attracted : so that if he committed breach of any of the provisions contained therein, he was liable to prosecution and conviction under Section 14 of the Act of 1946. His second contention was, that since the respondent in his application to the Pakistan government for the issue of a passport to him, had described himself as a Pakistani citizen he must be deemed to have voluntarily given up his citizenship as from the date of the said application and so also he became a foreigner for the purposes of the Act of 1946 and the Order of 1948. In order to properly appreciate these contentions a reference to the various enactments and orders bearing thereon is necessary at the very outset. The first enactment to which reference has to be made is the Act of 1946. Section 2 of that Act defines foreigner as a person who inter alia: (1) is not a national born British subject as defined in Sub-sections. (1) and (2) of Section 1 of the British Nationality and Status of Aliens Act, 1914, or provided that any British subject who under any law for the time being in force in British India ceased to be a British subject shall thereupon be deemed to be a foreigner.
( 4 ) SUB-SECTIONS (1) and (2) of Section 1 of the British Nationality and Status Act read as follows:
1- (1) The following persons shall be deemed to be natural born British subjects, namely: (a) Any person born within his Majestys dominions and allegiance : and (b) Any person born out of His Majestys dominions, whose father was a British subject at the time of that persons birth and either was born within His Majestys allegiance or was a person to whom a certificate of naturalization had been granted; and (c) Any person born on board a British ship-whether in foreign territorial waters or not: provided that the child of a British subject whether that child was born before or after the passi
Login now and unlock free premium legal research
Login to SupremeToday AI and access free legal analysis, AI highlights, and smart tools.
Login
now!
India’s Legal research and Law Firm App, Download now!
Copyright © 2023 Vikas Info Solution Pvt Ltd. All Rights Reserved.