Preventive Detention | P&H High Court Quashes Confirmation Order For 'Non-Application Of Mind', Directs Release Of Detenue
The Punjab & Haryana High Court has quashed a preventive detention confirmation order under the PITNDPS Act, holding that the State Government cannot mechanically rely on the Advisory Board's opinion and must independently apply its mind while confirming detention and determining its duration.
Justice Sumeet Goel said, "Any confirmation order that acts as a perfunctory rubber stamp or a mechanical/boilerplate replication of the Advisory Board's opinion suffers from a fatal non-application of mind. By failing to visibly project independent analysis and qualitative reasons, the order degenerates into a mere executive ipse dixit. This procedural fracture goes to the root of jurisdiction, thereby, rendering the confirmation order unsustainable."
The petitioner was detained pursuant to an order dated January 7, 2026, under the Prevention of Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act, 1988, on account of his alleged involvement in 10 FIRs. Following a reference, the Advisory Board opined that sufficient cause existed for detention, pursuant to which the State confirmed the detention for six months.
Challenging the confirmation order, the petitioner contended that it was passed without independent application of mind and merely reproduced the Advisory Board's conclusions.
The central question before the Court was whether the confirming authority is required to pass a reasoned order reflecting independent satisfaction while confirming preventive detention and fixing its duration.
The Court undertook an extensive examination of constitutional safeguards under Article 22 and the statutory framework under Section 9(f) of the PITNDPS Act.
It emphasised that preventive detention, though constitutionally permissible, is an exceptional measure that must strictly adhere to procedural safeguards.
The Court underscored that a positive opinion of the Advisory Board is not binding on the Government. The State retains an independent and dual discretion—first, whether to continue detention, and second, for what duration.
The phrase “may confirm” and “for such period as it thinks fit” mandates a reasoned and conscious decision, not a mechanical exercise.
The Court held that the confirmation order must be a “speaking order”, clearly demonstrating independent application of mind to the entire material, including but not limited to the Advisory Board's report.
It further observed that any order which merely replicates the Advisory Board's opinion without independent reasoning amounts to a “perfunctory rubber stamp” and suffers from fatal non-application of mind, rendering it unconstitutional.
"These safeguards provided under Article 22 of the Constitution of India are not merely perfunctory formalities; rather, they constitute an indelible and substantive facet of the due process of law, the non-compliance whereof renders the underlying proceedings null and void and the resultant detention fundamentally illegal. In this sensitive intersection of State security/ national welfare and individual freedom, the law demands strictissmi juris, adherence with these procedural safeguards, for when the State operates out of the shadows of suspicion/ apprehension of future transgression(s) rather than the light of evidence, this procedural shield remains the detenue's sole refuge against executive overreach," it added.
The bench said that a failure to scrupulously observe these Constitutional dictates does not merely constitute venial technical irregularity; it tantamount to a flagrant violation of Article 21, as the procedure established by law becomes a mere hollow shell if its foundational safeguards are bypassed or diluted.
Consequently, it said that "any statute providing for preventive detention must, as a condition precedent to its validity, incorporate these minimum safeguards to ensure they are not subverted by administrative ipse dixit."
Upon examining the impugned order, the Court found that it contained no reasons for confirming detention and it did not reflect any independent evaluation of the material.
The Court said that amongst the constellation of safeguards, Article 22(4) serves as an institutional check, by necessitating the constitution of an independent Advisory Board to scrutinise any proposal for extending detention beyond the period of 3 months.
The role of Advisory Board is not merely advisory in nature in colloquial sense, it functions as a quasi-judicial bulwark, a sieve through which the executive's subjective satisfaction must pass.
It failed to justify the period of six months' detention. The Court held that such an order is “sans reasoning” and violative of Article 21, as it reduces procedural safeguards to a mere formality.
The Court concluded that the impugned confirmation order does not reflect any reason neither for confirming the detention order nor for the period for which the detention order has been passed. Ergo, the same is sans reasoning, which is required to be coming forth from an order under challenge. Thus, the impugned confirmation order deserves to be quashed.
Mr. Ankur Mittal, Senior Advocate with Ms. Kushaldeep Kaur, Advocate,
Mr. Kushagar Goel, Advocate, Ms. Preeti Goyal, Advocate Mr. Sakal Sikri, Advocate and Ms. Sharvi Dadhwal, Advocate for the petitioner.
Mr. Gurmeet Singh, AAG Haryana.
Title: Jasveer Singh @ Jasbir Singh @ Kala v. State of Haryana and others