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CDJ 2026 MHC 2555 print Preview print print
Court : Before the Madurai Bench of Madras High Court
Case No : CRL RC(MD) No. 634 of 2026 & Crl. M.P(MD) No. 7667 of 2026
Judges: THE HONOURABLE MRS. JUSTICE L. VICTORIA GOWRI
Parties : Karthick Versus The Divisional Executive Magistrate and Tahsildar, Aranthangi Sub Division, Pudukottai & Another
Appearing Advocates : For the Petitioner: T. Lenin Kumar, Advocate. For the Respondent: M. Sakthi Kumar, Government Advocate(Criminal).
Date of Judgment : 10-04-2026
Head Note :-
BNSS - Section 438 r/w 442 -

Case Referred:
Selvam @ Selvaraj Versus The Executive Magistrate cum Deputy Commissioner of Police, (Law & Order, Crime & Traffic), Tiruppur & Another - (CDJ 2017 MHC 4350)
Judgment :-

(Prayer: Criminal Revision Petition is filed under Section 438 r/w 442 of BNSS, to call for the records pertaining to the order of the 1st respondent passed in M.C.No. 45/2025/B7 dated 16.03.2026 and set aside the same.)

1. This Criminal Revision Case is filed assailing the order of preventive detention dated 16.03.2026 passed by the 1st respondent in M.C. No.45/2025/B7, seeking to set aside the order by which the petitioner has been kept in custody in Central Prison, Trichy— as being without jurisdiction and in violation of the procedure established by law.

2. Factual Matrix:

               2.1. On 16.03.2026 5 the 1st respondent, purporting to act under Section 141 BNSS (pari materia Section 122(1)(b) CrPC), issued an order directing the detention of the petitioner on the allegation that he had breached a bond for good behaviour.

               2.2. The order is founded upon: (a) a recommendation of the second respondent police, (b) statements of unnamed witnesses, and (c) a revenueofficials’ enquiry report.

               2.3. No copy of those materials was furnished to the petitioner either before or during the enquiry.

               2.4. The “notice” relied on by the Executive Magistrate was served when the petitioner was already in custody; it merely informed him of the result, not the grounds, thereby denying a meaningful opportunity of defence.

               2.5. Consequently, the petitioner was detained on 16.03.2026, and continued to remain in custody till date.

3. Submissions on behalf of the Petitioner:

               3.1. Impugned order is ultra vires Section 141 BNSS because the Magistrate recorded neither any specific grounds nor his subjective satisfaction.

               3.2. Mandatory safeguards laid down in P. Sathish @ Sathish Kumar v. State (2019 (2) MWN (Cr.) 136) and reiterated in Selvam @ Selvaraj (CDJ 2017 MHC 4350) have been ignored—chiefly, supply of relied-upon documents, right to counsel, and right of cross-examination.

               3.3. The proceeding, though before an Executive Magistrate, is judicial in character (Bibhuti Bhusan Chatterjee v. State of Bihar, AIR 1960 SC 128); violation of principles of natural justice vitiates it ab initio.

4. Submissions on behalf of the State:

The learned Government Advocate(Criminal) fairly conceded that the impugned order has go following the mandates of the Hon'ble Division Bench of this Court in Crl.R.C.No.137 of 2018 etc., cases.

5. Points for Consideration:

               5.1.Whether the 1st respondent followed the mandatory procedure under Sections 110–117 CrPC and Section 141 BNSS before ordering detention.

               5.2.Whether denial of basic procedural safeguards amounts to absence of jurisdiction, rendering the order liable to be set aside.

6. Discussion:

6.1. Nature of Proceedings:

               Chapter VIII proceedings, though executive in form, are judicial in substance as mandated by the Hon'ble Apex Court in Bibhuti Bhusan Chatterjee case. Personal liberty, a facet of Article 21, cannot be curtailed save by “procedure established by law” which must be just, fair and reasonable in terms of the judgment of the Hobble Supreme Court in Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India(1(1978) 1 SCC 248).

6.2. Statutory Mandate:

Section 141 (2) BNSS obliges the Executive Magistrate to:

               “(a) record in writing the grounds of his satisfaction, and

               (b) furnish to the person the substance of those grounds and the material relied on, enabling him to show cause.”

               The impugned order contains only a recital that “materials have been perused” without narrating what those materials are, how they establish breach, or why preventive detention—an extreme measure—was indispensable.

6.3. Violation of Natural Justice:

               The ten-point guidelines in P. Sathish case (accepted by this Court as binding on all Executive Magistrates) require supply of documents, right to legal representation, and an opportunity of cross-examination. The record is silent on compliance. Service of a bare notice upon a person  already incarcerated is, at best, post-decisional information and at worst, a farce.

6.4. Settled Proposition of Law:

               The lis in hand is no more res integra and the same is covered by the judgment of the Hon'be Division Bench of this Court in Crl.R.C.Nos.137 of 2018 etc., batch in P.Sathish case dated 13.03.2023 and the relevant portion of the same is extracted as follows:

               “88. ....(c) Violation of a bond executed under Section 110 of the Cr.P.C., can be dealt with under Section 446 of the Code and not under Section 122(1)(b) of the Cr.P.C. Consequently, we affirm the judgment of Mr. Justice P.N Prakash in Devi v Executive Magistrate (2020 6 CTC 157) in its entirety. The decision of the learned single judge to the contrary in Vadivel @ Mettai Vadivel v The State (Crl.R.C.No. 982 of 2018 etc., batch) will stand overruled.

               (e) In the light of the law laid down in paragraph 24 of the three judge bench decision of the Supreme Court in Gulam Abbas v State of Uttar Pradesh (1982) 1 SCC 71, an Executive Magistrate cannot authorize imprisonment under Section 122(1)(b) for violation of a bond under Section 107 Cr.P.C. A person who has violated the bond executed before the Executive Magistrate under the said provision will have to be challaned or prosecuted before the Judicial Magistrate for inquiry and punishment under Section 122(1)(b) Cr.P.C.”

6.5. Consequences of Non-Compliance:

               Failure to observe mandatory safeguards strikes at the root of jurisdiction. The impugned order, passed mechanically and without recorded reasons, is void and not merely voidable.

7. Conclusion:

               Fully fortified by the judgment extracted supra, the order dated 16.03.2026 in M.C.No.45/2025/B& suffers from illegality, procedural irregularity, and violation of natural justice. It cannot stand judicial scrutiny.

8. In Final,

               (i) The Criminal Revision Petition is allowed.

               (ii) The impugned detention order dated 16.03.2026 passed by the Divisional Executive Magistrate and Tahsildar, Aranthangi Sub Division, is set aside.

                   (iii) Liberty is reserved to the respondents to initiate fresh proceedings, if warranted, strictly in conformity with Chapter VIII CrPC / Section 141 BNSS and the guidelines in Crl.R.C.(MD)No.137 of 2018 batch, and allied judgments. Consequently, connected Miscellaneous Petition is closed.

 
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