MANU/SC/0038/1974

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA

Writ Petition Nos. 295-297 of 1974

Decided On: 09.09.1974

Appellants: D. Bhuvan Mohan Patnaik and Ors. Vs. Respondent: State of Andhra Pradesh and Ors.

Hon'ble Judges/Coram:
H.R. Khanna, P.K. Goswami and Y.V. Chandrachud

JUDGMENT

Y.V. Chandrachud, J.

1. This is a group of three writ petitions under article 32 of the Constitution.

2. D. Bhuvan Mohan Patnaik, the petitioner in Writ Petition No. 295 of 1974 is undergoing the sentences of 41/2 years and 51/2 years awarded to him in two sessions cases. He is also an under trial prisoner in what is known as the Parvatipuram Naxalite Conspiracy case. Nagabhushan Patnaik, who is the petitioner in Writ Petition No. 296 of 1974 was sentenced to death by the learned II Additional Sessions Judge, Visakhapatnam, but that sentence was commuted by the State Government to life imprisement. P. Hussainar, the petitioner in Writ Petition No. 297 of 1974, is undergoing the sentence of imprisonment for life imposed by the same learned Judge. He is also an under-trial prisoner in the Parvatipuram Case. The three petitioners are undergoing the sentences in the Central Jail at Visakhapatnam.

3. We are not concerned with any evaluation of the political beliefs of the petitioners who claim to be Naxalities nor with the legality of the sentences imposed on them nor indeed with the charges on which two of them are being tried. The only reliefs which they ask for are : (1) that the armed police guards posted around the jail should be removed and (2) that the livewire electrical mechanism fixed on top of the jail wall should be dismantled.

4. Mr. Garg who appears on behalf of the petitioners contends that even the discipline of the prison must have the authority of law and that there should be a sort of "Iron curtain" between the prisoners and the police so that convicts and under-trial prisoners may be truly free from the influence and tyranny of the police.

5. Section 3(1) of the, Prisons Act, 9 of 1894, defines 'prison' to mean any jail or place used permanently or temporarily for the detention of prisoners, including "all lands and buildings appurtenant thereto". The Superintendent of the Central Jail, Visakhapatnam, who is the 3rd respondent to the petitions, has filed an affidavit stating that the usual watch and ward staff of the jail having been found to be inadequate, the services of the Andhra Pradesh Special Police Force had to be requisitioned to guard the jail from outside. The affidavit shows that these policemen live in huts built on a part of the vacant jail land and that the officers of the Force are accommodated in the "jail Club" immediately outside the jail. Their office is situated in a block outside the jail, which was meant to be used as a waiting room for visitors wishing to meet the prisoners. The argument of Mr. Garg is that since prison includes lands appurtenant thereto, the members and officers of the Andhra Pradesh Special Police Force must, on the affidavit of the third respondent, be held to occupy a part of the prison and that must be prevented as it is calculated to cause substantial interference with the exercise by the prisoners of their fundamental rights.

6. Convicts are not, by mere reason of the conviction, denuded of all the fundamental rights which they otherwise possess. A compulsion under the authority of law, following upon a conviction, to live in a prison-house entails to by its own force the deprivation of fundamental freedoms like the right to move freely throughout the territory of India or the right to "practice" a profess........