Case Law
Subject : Constitutional Law - Preventive Detention
Jaipur: The Rajasthan High Court, Jaipur Bench, has quashed a preventive detention order issued under the Conservation of Foreign Exchange and Prevention of Smuggling Activities Act, 1974 (COFEPOSA), citing unexplained delay by the Central Government (the appropriate authority) in deciding the detenue's representation. The division bench of Hon'ble Mr. Justice Mahendar Kumar Goyal and Hon'ble Mr. Justice Ashutosh Kumar emphasized that the constitutional right to have a representation decided with utmost expedition under Article 22(5) cannot be compromised.
The court was hearing a Habeas Corpus petition (D.B. Habeas Corpus Petition No. 22/2025) filed by
The detention stemmed from investigations initiated based on complaints from UCO Bank in 2021 regarding alleged fraudulent overseas remittances against non-existent imports of digital services, purportedly funding gold smuggling. Mr.
Represented by Senior Advocate Mr. Vikram Chaudhri, the petitioner argued that the detention order was vitiated on several grounds:
* Mala fides: Passed to nullify a bail order.
*
Faulty Grounds:
Based on non-existent grounds and coerced statements later retracted (both by the petitioner and a co-accused,
* Unwarranted Detention: Petitioner was already in custody, and ordinary law was sufficient.
* Delay in Passing Order: Inordinate delay of nearly three years from the initial complaint snapped the live link.
* Non-Supply of Documents: Failure to supply all relied-upon documents and providing illegible copies hampered the right to effective representation.
* Variance: Discrepancy between the stated purpose (preventing future acts) and grounds (past smuggling).
*
Procedural Lapses:
Inconsistent stand on deciding representations vis-à-vis the
* Delay in Deciding Representations: Crucially, unexplained delay by both the detaining authority and the Central Government violated the Article 22(5) guarantee.
* Discrimination: Only the petitioner was detained among multiple accused.
Mr. R.D. Rastogi, Additional Solicitor General, appearing for the Union of India, countered that:
* Maintainability: The petition was initially premature and later flawed for not challenging the confirmation order (preliminary objections rejected by the court).
* Validity: The detention order complied with COFEPOSA and constitutional provisions. All relied-upon documents were supplied.
* Detention Justified: Preventive detention is distinct from prosecution and permissible even if the detenue is in custody, provided the authority is satisfied about the likelihood of release and future prejudicial acts.
*
No
* Retraction Issue: Sponsoring authority was unaware of the co-accused's retraction; besides, detention was based on multiple grounds (Sec 5A COFEPOSA).
*
Representation Decided Promptly:
Detailed explanation provided for the time taken by the detaining authority and the appropriate government, accounting for holidays and procedural steps. Argued that
* No Discrimination: Petitioner was the alleged 'kingpin' justifying differential treatment.
The High Court meticulously examined each ground of challenge against the backdrop of established legal principles governing preventive detention.
Preliminary Objections: Rejected, holding that strict pleading rules don't apply in habeas corpus and non-challenge of the confirmation order (based on non-reviewable Advisory Board opinion) isn't fatal.
Delay in Passing Order: Found no unexplained delay, noting the petitioner's increased activities in 2023-24 provided a proximate link.
Non-consideration of Retraction: Held the petitioner failed to substantiate that the co-accused's retraction was properly communicated. Also invoked Sec 5A COFEPOSA, stating the order could stand on other grounds.
Supply of Documents: Found no merit, stating only relied-upon documents need supply, and the illegibility claim was an afterthought.
Detention during Custody/Prosecution: Reaffirmed that preventive detention is permissible alongside prosecution and during custody if procedural safeguards and subjective satisfaction regarding future risks are met. Found the detaining authority's satisfaction regarding potential bail was based on relevant material (co-accused bail).
Discrimination/Variance/Inconclusive Investigation: Rejected these grounds based on established precedents and the specific facts.
The court zeroed in on the timeline for deciding the representations filed by the petitioner (received Oct 18, 2024) and his wife (received Oct 21, 2024). While accepting the explanation for the time taken by the detaining authority (decision on Oct 30, 2024), the court found fatal flaws in the handling by the appropriate government (Central Government).
The court observed: > "No reason is forthcoming from the respondents as to why comments of the sponsoring authority which, on the petitioner’s representation were received on 24.10.2024 and on his wife’s representation were received on 25.10.2024, were not remitted to the appropriate government immediately thereafter and why did the respondents wait till the decision of the detaining authority on 30.10.2024 before sending the same to the appropriate government."
The court rejected the argument that deciding both representations simultaneously was necessary or justified the delay. It emphasized that the detaining authority and the appropriate government must consider representations independently and promptly.
> "Consideration of the representation by the detaining authority and by the appropriate government operates in different sphere independent to each other and both are under an obligation to decide the same with utmost expediency."
Citing Jaseela Shaji vs. Union of India (2024) , the court reiterated that Article 22(5) mandates utmost expedition, and each day's delay matters. The failure to forward the representations and comments to the appropriate government immediately, without waiting for the detaining authority's decision, constituted an unexplained delay.
Concluding that the unexplained delay by the appropriate government in deciding the representations was fatal to the continued detention, the High Court allowed the habeas corpus petition.
The court ordered: > "Resultantly, the habeas corpus petition is allowed. The detention order dated 08.10.2024 is quashed and set aside and the petitioner is directed to be released from detention forthwith, if not warranted in any other case."
#COFEPOSA #HabeasCorpus #RightToRepresentation #RajasthanHighCourt
Incorrect Statutory Provision in Bail Appeal Does Not Bar Substantive Rights: Punjab and Haryana HC Grants Bail in UAPA Case
03 Jun 2026
Merit Prevails: Rajasthan HC Protects Meritorious Candidates in Teacher Recruitment, Orders Institutional SOPs
03 Jun 2026
Broadcaster Liable for Defamatory Content if Editorial Control Exists Despite Third-Party Origin: Madras High Court
08 Jun 2026
Delhi Court Denies Bail to Cook in Hotel Fire
09 Jun 2026
Allegations of Unfair Means in Recruitment Are Serious, Cannot Quash FIR Under Section 528 BNSS: Rajasthan High Court
09 Jun 2026
Aerial Right of Way for Transmission Lines Vests with State; Individual Compensation Claims Rejected: J&K&L High Court
09 Jun 2026
Sikkim High Court Mandates Disclosure of Recruitment Exam Merit Lists Subject to No-Social-Media-Publication Undertaking
09 Jun 2026
Beyond Arbitration: The Hidden Costs of Legal Victory
09 Jun 2026
Consensual Separation Agreement Bars Maintenance Claims Under Section 488 CrPC: High Court of J&K and Ladakh
06 Mar 2026
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.