(1.) HABEAS Corpus Petition No. 1139 of 1991 filed by Saroop Singh and H. C. Petition No. 1140 of 1991 filed by Kashmir Singh ante cut of the same activity which is the ground of detention for detaining these petitioners. Since the point argued is identical, these petitions are being disposed of by a common judgment.
(2.) BY an order dated 25.9. 1990 passed by the Joint Secretary to Government of India, Ministry of Finance, Department of Revenue, - both these petitioners were detained in pursuance of the order issued under Section 3 (i) of the Conservation of Foreign Exchange and Prevention of Smuggling Activities Act, 1974. The ground for detaining the petitioner was that on 6.8.1990 at about 15-00 hours on a tip from the Officer on Special Duty (n) D.R. I., New Delhi, truck No. NLM 9653 was intercepted at Rajghat, Varanasi. Saroop Singh was the driver of the truck and Kashmir Singh was its cleaner. The truck was informed to be loaded with empty gunny bags. However, on search 75 packages of ball-bearings, made in Romania, 34 packages of adhesive tapes, made in Taiwan and 117 packages of erasures, made in Japan valued collectively at Rs. 19, 66, 640 were recovered. On demand to produce the documentary evidence to verify that these goods had not been illegally carried, the driver and the cleaner failed to produce any document. Consequently the truck along with the recovered goods were seized under Section 110 of Customs Act, 1962 as the same were liable for confiscation under Sections 11(d) and 115 (2) of the Act. Thereafter the Custom authorities recorded the statement of the driver Swaroop Singh on 8.8.1990 under Section 108 of the Customs Act and that of the cleaner Kashmir Singh under Section 108 of the Customs Act. The grounds of detention mention that these persons admitted that one Ramesh Wadhera was the owner of the said truck and he used to pay handsome money for transporting the smuggled goods from Bagdogra to Delhi, as risk was involved in such a transportation. Both the persons admitted that they had knowledge of the smuggled goods loaded in the truck and that in the past they had received handsome money for carrying the goods from Bagdogra to Delhi. Relying upon the statement and the recovery the detention order was passed against the petitioners. There were other matters also mentioned in the grounds of the detention but as this writ petition can be disposed of on a small point, it does not appear necessary to give those details.
(3.) LEARNED counsel for the petitioners has relied upon the cases reported in AIR 1986 SC page 1072-Sit a Ram Somani and others v. State of Rajasthan, AIR 1987 SC page 137- Anant Sakharam Raut v. State of Maharashtra and another and AIR 1987 SC page 1472-Union of India and others v. Manohar Lal Narang in support of his contention.