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Reserved On: 25.09.2025 vs (I) Ut Of J&K
2025 Latest Caselaw 2336 J&K

Citation : 2025 Latest Caselaw 2336 J&K
Judgement Date : 14 October, 2025

Jammu & Kashmir High Court

Reserved On: 25.09.2025 vs (I) Ut Of J&K on 14 October, 2025

Author: Vinod Chatterji Koul
Bench: Vinod Chatterji Koul
                                                                            2025:JKLHC-JMU:3348



      HIGH COURT OF JAMMU & KASHMIR AND LADAKH
                      AT JAMMU

 HCP No. 104/2025
                                               Reserved on:         25.09.2025
                                              Pronounced on:        14.10.2025


Murad Ali S/o Haneef Ali,                          .... Petitioner/Appellant(s)
R/o Village Hardo Muthi,Tehsil Marheen,
District Kathua
Through his Father
Haneef Ali S/o Galu Deen,
R/o Village Ghatti, Forlain,
Tehsil Marheen, District Kathua

                         Through:-         Mr. Siddhant Gupta, Advocate.

                   V/s

(i) UT of J&K,                                              .....Respondent(s)
Through Principal Secretary (Home)
Civil Secretariat, Jammu
(ii) District Magistrate, Kathua
(iii)SSP, Kathua
(iv) Superintendent, Central Jail,
Kot Bhalwal, Jammu

                         Through:-         Mr. Suneel Malhotra, G.A.
CORAM : HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE VINOD CHATTERJI KOUL, JUDGE

                                JUDGMENT

1) Through the medium of this petition, petitioner seeks quashing of

Detention Order No. PSA/164 dated 12.06.2025, passed by District Magistrate,

Kathua, (hereinafter referred to as 'Detaining Authority') detaining the detenu-

Murad Ali S/o Haneef Ali R/o Village Hardo Muthi, Tehsil Marheen, District

Kathua (hereinafter referred to as 'detenu'), whose activities are prejudicial to

maintenance of public order. This order of detention has been challenged by the

detenu through his father-Haneef Ali.

2025:JKLHC-JMU:3348

2) The detention order has been challenged on the grounds that (i)

respondent No. 2, on the basis of dossier submitted by respondent No. 3

without application of mind, has passed the detention order which demonstrates

complete non-application of mind; (ii) the detenu has already been granted bail

in all FIRs and preventive detention cannot be used as substitute for the

ordinary law of land when the detenu is already facing trial; (iii) the family

members of the detenu have not been informed about his detention and the

impugned detention order has been provided in the English language to the

family members as the family members are not conversant to the same; and

(iv) the detenu has been detained without affording fundamental and statutory

right to make a representation against the order of detention as neither the

grounds of detention were furnished in the language understood by the detenu

nor he was informed of his right to make representation to the detaining

authority or to the government.

3) As per the dossier submitted by the Superintendent of Police, Kathua, the

detenu was involved in four different FIRs, i.e., FIR No. 89/2022 registered

under Sections 452/323/147/148 IPC at Police Station Rajbagh; (ii) FIR No.

80/2023 registered under Sections 279/336/188 IPC IPC and 11 of the

Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act, 1960 and Section 184 of Motor Vehicles

Act at Police Station Rajbagh; (iii) FIR No. 216/2024 registered under Sections

125/132/121(1)/191(2) BNS at Police Station Rajbagh; and (iv) FIR No.

56/2024 registered under Sections 8/21/22/29 NDPS Act at Police Station

Rajbagh.

4) Apart from that, the detenu is also involved in Antisocial/Anti National

activities entered in the daily diaries i.e., (i) DD No. 34 dated 12.12.2024 of

2025:JKLHC-JMU:3348

Police Station Rajbagh; (ii) DD No. 29 dated 13.12.2024 of Police Station

Rajbagh; (iii) DD No. 27 dated 14.12.2024 of Police Station Rajbagh; (iv) DD

No. 20 dated 15.12.2024 of Police Station Rajbagh and (v) DD No. 15 dated

20.02.2025 of Police Station Rajbagh. The allegation against the detenu is that

he is a habitual bovine smuggler and his repeated involvement in offences

under Section 188/IPC and 11 of the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act,

1960, which reflects a continuous pattern of his illegal activities and the actions

of detenu have caused communal tensions, which poses a significant threat to

peace and stability in the region.

5) The aforesaid FIRs against the detenu reflect the activities of the detenu

which poses a serious threat to public peace. The Detaining Authority, after

considering the police dossier, arrived at its subjective satisfaction that

detention of the detenu was necessary to prevent him from acting in a manner

prejudicial to the maintenance of public order.

6) The respondents have filed their counter affidavit and produced the

detention record. It is submitted by respondent No. 2-District Magistrate,

Kathua, that the detenu was found continuously and repeatedly involved in

number of criminal activities such as smuggling of bovine animals and also

involved in heinous offences like attempt to murder, rash driving, snatching,

wrongful assailment and assault, bovine smuggling and drug peddling,

therefore, in order to restrain him from doing such activities, detention order

was passed by respondent No. 2 with full application of mind. Respondents

further submit that the detenu was provided the order of detention as well as the

copy of the dossier, contents of the order, the grounds of detention and other

documents have been read over in English and explained to him in the language

2025:JKLHC-JMU:3348

which he fully understood and all the documents were handed over to him to

make a representation to the Government or Detaining Authority and his

acknowledgment was obtained on the execution report. The detention order

was duly approved by the Home Department and subsequently confirmed by

the Advisory Board. The illegal activities of detenu were threat to public

peace and security. The Detaining Authority, thus, deemed it necessary to

detain him under the Public Safety Act to prevent him from further pursuing

such activities.

7) Heard learned counsel for the parties and perused the record.

8) Perusal of the record reveals that the detenu has been detained for his

activities which were found to be prejudicial to the public peace and order. In

the grounds of detention, the Detaining Authority, has relied on the fact that the

detenu was involved in FIR No. 89/2022 registered under Sections

452/323/147/148 IPC at Police Station Rajbagh; (ii) FIR No. 80/2023

registered under Sections 279/336/188 IPC IPC and 11 of the Prevention of

Cruelty to Animals Act, 1960 and Section 184 of Motor Vehicles Act at Police

Station Rajbagh; (iii) FIR No. 216/2024 registered under Sections

125/132/121(1)/191(2) BNS at Police Station Rajbagh; and (iv) FIR No.

56/2024 registered under Sections 8/21/22/29 NDPS Act at Police Station

Rajbagh. However, there is a clear non-application of mind, as the Detaining

Authority has failed to consider the fact that the detenu was on bail in all the

FIRs and therefore, the order of detention is bad.

9) The detaining authority has relied upon the aforesaid FIRs while passing the

impugned order, without considering that the detenu was admittedly on bail, and

2025:JKLHC-JMU:3348

no further activities have been alleged against the detenu, as such, the impugned

detention order is liable to be quashed.

10) The "Public Order" as a concept in distinction to "Law and Order" has been

considered by the Hon'ble Supreme Court in a long line of cases. In the case of

"K. K. Saravana BabuVs State of Tamil Nadu and another" (2008) 9 SCC 89,

the Hon'ble Supreme Court of India has recapitulated the case law on the said

aspect in which the Security of the State followed by the Public Order and last by

"Law and Order" has been set up in an hierarchy. The "Public Order" has been

read to be even the tempo of the life of the community taking the country as a

whole or even a specified locality. Disturbance of Public Order is meant to be

distinguished from acts directing against individuals which do not disturb the

society to the extent of causing a general disturbance of public tranquility.

11) By reference to a case of "Arun Ghosh Vs State of West Bengal," (1970) 1

SCC 1998, the Hon'ble Supreme Court of India has laid emphasis on the

potentiality of the act to be a determining factor to compartmentalize an act to be

one disturbing public order or a law-and-order problem. It has been observed that

an act by itself is not determinant of its own gravity as in its quality it may not

differ from another but in its potentiality, it may be very different.

12) The Supreme Court of India in a case titled as "Sama Aruna Vs State of

Telangana and another" (2018) 12 SCC 150 in paras 17 & 23 has held as

under:-

"17............A detention order which is founded on stale incidents, must be regarded as an order of punishment for a crime, passed without a trial, though purporting to be an order of preventive detention. The essential concept of preventive detention is that the detention of a person is not to punish him for something he has done but to prevent him from doing it.

23............A detaining authority must be taken to know both, the purpose and the procedure of law."

2025:JKLHC-JMU:3348

13) "Maintenance of Public Order" as being one of the grounds of subjecting a

person to preventive detention is not to be easily assumed to be readily available

by a just reference to series of FIRs reporting crimes against a particular individual

which would at the most render him to be branded as a habitual offender for which

the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 in itself has conceived a preventive measure

under section 110 which enlists a number of categories for an Executive

Magistrate to take cognizance and bind a person so as to prevent him from

indulging in repeat of the alleged activities. What is meant to be effectively cured

and dealt with under section 110 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 cannot

be diverted to be dealt with by application of preventive detention mode of J&K

Public Safety Act, by depriving a person of his personal liberty for any given

period of time. A preventive detention cannot be resorted to by the debunking

ordinary criminal procedure and trial of cases.

14) Sr. Superintendent of Police (SSP), Kathua in his dossier did not serve

respondent No. 2 - District Magistrate, Kathua with full picture of facts with

respect to the detenu. All the FIRs referred to in the grounds of detention are those

cases in which detenu has already been bailed out. Offences under Section 188

Penal Code read with offence under Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act, 1960 in

which detenu is said to be involved are not relatable in any manner to maintenance

of public order. Moreover, in the grounds of detention, it is mentioned that due to

involvement of detenu in any of aforesaid FIRs, any communal tension or

disharmony came to take place which led to the law and order enforcement agency

facing a difficult time in bringing under control the disturbed public order.

2025:JKLHC-JMU:3348

15) It may be appropriate to mention that perusal of grounds of detention

reveals that grounds of detention are vague and ambiguous and do not refer to any

date, month or year of the activities, which have been attributed to detenu.

Detention in preventive custody on the basis of such vague and ambiguous

grounds cannot be justified. It may not be out of place to mention here that

preventive detention is largely precautionary and is based on suspicion. The Court

is ill-equipped to investigate into circumstances of suspicion on which such

anticipatory action must be largely based. The nature of the proceeding is

incapable of objective assessment. The matters to be considered by the detaining

authority are whether the person concerned, having regard to his past conduct

judged in the light of surrounding circumstances and other relevant material, is

likely to act in a prejudicial manner as contemplated by the provisions of the law

and, if so, whether it is necessary to detain him with a view to preventing him from

so acting. These are not the matters susceptible of objective determination, and

they could not have been intended to be judged by objective standards. They are

essentially the matters which have to be administratively determined for the

purpose of taking administrative action. Their determination is, therefore,

deliberately and advisedly left by the Legislature to the subjective satisfaction of

detaining authority which, by reason of its special position, experience and

expertise, would be best suited to decide them. Thus, the Constitutional

imperatives of Article 22(5) and the dual obligation imposed on the authority

making the order of preventive detention, are twofold: (1) The detaining authority

must, as soon as may be, i.e. as soon as practicable, after the detention order is

passed, communicate to the detenu the grounds on which the order of detention

has been made, and (2) the detaining authority must afford the detenu the earliest

2025:JKLHC-JMU:3348

opportunity of making the representation against the order of detention, i.e. to be

furnished with sufficient particulars to enable him to make a representation which,

on being considered, may obtain relief to him. The inclusion of an irrelevant or

non-existent ground, among other relevant grounds, is an infringement of the first

of the rights and the inclusion of an obscure or vague ground, among other clear

and definite grounds, is an infringement of the second of the rights. In either case

there is an invasion of the constitutional rights of the detenu entitling him to

approach the Court for relief. The reason why the inclusion of even a simple

irrelevant or obscure ground, among several relevant and clear grounds, is an

invasion of the detenu's constitutional right is that the Court is precluded from

adjudicating upon the sufficiency of the grounds, and it cannot substitute its

objective decision for the subjective satisfaction of the detaining authority. Even if

one of the grounds or reasons, which led to subjective satisfaction of detaining

authority, is non-existent or misconceived or irrelevant, the order of detention

would be invalid. Where order of detention is founded on distinct and separate

grounds, if any one of the grounds is vague or irrelevant the entire order must fall.

The satisfaction of detaining authority being subjective, it is impossible to

predicate whether the order would have been passed in the absence of vague or

irrelevant data. A ground is said to be irrelevant when it has no connection with

the satisfaction of the authority making the order of detention. Irrelevant grounds,

being taken into consideration for making the order of detention, are sufficient to

vitiate it. One irrelevant ground is sufficient to vitiate the order as it is not possible

to assess, in what manner and to what extent, that irrelevant ground operated on

the mind of the appropriate authority, and contributed to his satisfaction that it was

necessary to detain the detenu in order to prevent him from acting in any manner

2025:JKLHC-JMU:3348

prejudicial to the maintenance of the public order or security of the State.

Reference in this regard is made to Mohd. Yousuf Rather v. State of J&K and

others, AIR 1979 SC 1925; and Mohd. Yaqoob v. State of J&K and ors, 2008

(2) JKJ 255 [HC].

16) Grounds of detention must lay down the charge against detenu and it must

be precise, unequivocal and unambiguous. The detenu must be in a position to

give a specific reply/rebuttal to the charge and that is only possible where charge is

specific and precise. Else, the detenu is only able to give a bare denial by stating

that the allegations are false. If the grounds of detention are based on

unsubstantiated allegations, the same along with the order of detention can be

quashed as the detenu has not been given opportunity to make a viable

representation either to detaining authority or to advisory board. The opportunity

to represent to the authorities concerned is not a hollow formality. To detain a

person only based on allegations without there being any material to substantiate

those allegations would imperil the fundamental rights of an individual enshrined

under Article 21 of the Constitution. These observations have been made by the

Division Bench of this Court in LPA no.19/2024 titled as Showkat Ali v. Union

Territory of J&K and others, vide judgment dated 26.07.2024.

17) In view of the aforesaid facts and circumstances of the case, the preventive

detention of detenu is held to be unwarranted and misconceived and illegal.

Accordingly, the preventive detention Order No. PSA/164 dated 12.06.2025,

passed by the respondent No. 2- District Magistrate, Kathua under J&K Public

Safety Act, 1978 is hereby set aside and the petitioner is directed to be restored to

his personal liberty.

2025:JKLHC-JMU:3348

18) The respondent No. 2 - District Magistrate, Kathua as well as the

Superintendent of the concerned Jail to ensure release of the detenu from the

preventive custody unless required in any other case.

19)     The instant petition is, accordingly, disposed of.

20)    Detention record to be returned back to learned GA by the Registrar

Judicial of this Court.


                                                           (VINOD CHATTERJI KOUL)
                                                                             Judge
Jammu:
14.10.2025
Ram Murti

                      Whether the judgment is reportable           :    Yes
 

 
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