By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Disclaimer.
Accept
Lawyer's ArcLawyer's ArcLawyer's Arc
  • Home
  • Blog
  • Opportunity
    • Paid Law Internships
    • Internships
    • Jobs
    • Events & Workshops
    • Moot Court
    • Call For Papers
  • Editorials
  • Case Analysis
  • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Disclaimer
    • Privacy Policy
    • Refund and Cancellation Policy
    • Terms of Service
  • Submit Blog
  • My Interests
Reading: AMEENA BEGUM vs THE STATE OF TELANGANA, 2023
Share
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
Font ResizerAa
Lawyer's ArcLawyer's Arc
  • Home
  • Blog
  • Case Analysis
  • Subject Notes
    • LAW OF TORT
    • Constitution Law
    • CRIMINAL LAW
    • Family law
    • Contract Law
    • IPR
    • international law
    • Banking law
    • COMPANY LAW
    • CYBER LAW
    • Environmental law
  • Jobs
  • Opportunity
    • Internships
    • Paid Law Internships
    • Events & Workshops
  • Editorials
  • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Disclaimer
    • Privacy Policy
    • Refund and Cancellation Policy
    • Terms of Service
    • Submit Blog Post
  • Customize Interests
Follow US
© Lawyer's Arc 2020-2025. All Rights Reserved.
Lawyer's Arc > Landmark Judgements > AMEENA BEGUM vs THE STATE OF TELANGANA, 2023
Landmark Judgements

AMEENA BEGUM vs THE STATE OF TELANGANA, 2023

Guidelines to review preventive detention orders.

Last updated: 02/10/2025 9:15 PM
Pankaj Pandey
Published 02/10/2025
Share
6 Min Read
SHARE
Contents
AMEENA BEGUM vs THE STATE OF TELANGANA, 2023Factual BackgroundIssue(s)Reason for the decisionConclusion

AMEENA BEGUM vs THE STATE OF TELANGANA, 2023

AMEENA BEGUM VS. THE STATE OF TELANGANA & ORS. Citation: 2023 INSC 788 Criminal Appeal No. of 2023 (Arising out of SLP (Criminal) No. 8510 of 2023) Date of Judgment: September 4, 2023

Factual Background

The appeal challenged a judgment and order dated June 28, 2023, of the High Court for the State of Telangana, which had dismissed a writ petition filed by the Appellant (Ameena Begum) seeking a writ of habeas corpus for her husband (“Detenu”). The High Court had upheld the Detention Order dated March 24, 2023, passed by the Commissioner of Police, Hyderabad City, under Section 3(2) of the Telangana Prevention of Dangerous Activities… Act 1986 (“the Act”). The Detenu was categorized as a ‘Goonda’ under the Act. The Detention Order noted that a previous detention order (dated March 4, 2021) against the Detenu had been quashed by the High Court (August 16, 2021). The Commissioner asserted that the Detenu had not changed his habitual nature of committing crimes, listing 9 more offences during 2022 and 2023, and based the detention on 5 specific FIRs. These alleged offenses included cheating, extortion, robbery, outraging the modesty of women, and obstructing public servants. The Commissioner expressed satisfaction that the ordinary law was “not sufficient” to deal with the Detenu’s illegal activities. The Commissioner also noted that the Detenu was granted bail in two cases despite the prosecution filing “suitable counters” opposing bail, and believed that if set free, the Detenu would commit similar offenses detrimental to public order. The Detenu’s representation was rejected, and the Government confirmed the Detention Order, directing its continuation for 12 months.

Issue(s)

  1. Whether the alleged activities of the Detenu were prejudicial to the maintenance of ‘public order’ or if they fell within the ambit of ‘law and order’.
  2. Whether the Detention Order was based on a proper application of mind to all relevant circumstances, or whether extraneous factors vitiated the order.
  3. Whether recourse to preventive detention was legally justified when the ordinary law of the land was sufficient to address the situation.

Decision of the Supreme Court

-Story After Advertisement -

The Supreme Court allowed the appeal. The Detention Order dated March 24, 2023, and the impugned judgment and order of the High Court were quashed. The Court directed that the Detenu (Appellant’s husband) be released from detention forthwith.

Reason for the decision

The Court found that the Detention Order was indefensible and could not be upheld.

  1. Failure to Distinguish ‘Law and Order’ from ‘Public Order’: The Court stressed that not every breach of law leads to public disorder. For an act to disturb ‘public order,’ it must impact the community or the public at large, evoking fear, panic, or insecurity, disturbing the “even tempo of the life of the community”. The offenses cited against the Detenu were deemed “separate and stray acts affecting private individuals,” which relate to ‘law and order’ rather than prejudicially affecting ‘public order’.
  2. Ordinary Law was Sufficient: The detention was illegal because the existing legal framework (Penal Code and Cr. PC) was sufficient to address the offenses anticipated to be repeated by the Detenu. Preventive detention is an exceptional measure and should not be invoked as a tool for enforcing “law and order”.
  3. Consideration of Extraneous Materials: The Detention Order was vitiated by the inclusion of extraneous considerations. The Commissioner referred to the Detenu’s history of offences from 2019-20 that formed the basis of a previous detention order which had already been quashed by the High Court. The Court held that relying on stale material or offenses that were part of a quashed detention order has no direct nexus or link with the immediate need for present detention.
  4. Misplaced Intent Regarding Bail: The Commissioner’s strong emphasis on the Detenu being granted bail despite prosecution opposition revealed an intent to use the detention law to circumvent or substitute the punitive law. The Commissioner’s observations were reflective of an intention to detain the Detenu at any cost. If bail was wrongly granted, the State had remedies in ordinary law (appealing or seeking cancellation of bail) rather than resorting to the extraordinary measure of preventive detention.

Conclusion

The Detention Order was legally unsustainable because the activities attributed to the Detenu did not qualify as prejudicial to the maintenance of public order. The Detaining Authority failed to appreciate the crucial distinction between maintenance of “law and order” and maintenance of “public order,” invoking the drastic preventive detention law where ordinary criminal law provided sufficient remedies. The appeal was allowed, and the Detenu was ordered to be released.

-Story After Advertisement -

Related

You Might Also Like

ALL INDIA JUDGES ASSOCIATION vs UNION OF INDIA, 2025

GAYATRI BALASAMY vs M/S ISG NOVASOFT TECHNOLOGIES LIMITED, 2025

VARSHATAI vs THE STATE OF MAHARASHTRA, 2025

IMRAN PRATAPGADHI vs STATE OF GUJARAT 2025

SUNIL KUMAR SINGH vs BIHAR LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL, 2025

TAGGED:AMEENA BEGUM vs THE STATE OF TELANGANA 2023

Sign Up For Daily Newsletter

Be keep up! Get the latest breaking news delivered straight to your inbox.
[mc4wp_form]
By signing up, you agree to our Terms of Use and acknowledge the data practices in our Privacy Policy. You may unsubscribe at any time.
Share This Article
Facebook Email Print
Share
What do you think?
Love0
Surprise0
Sad0
Happy0
Angry0
Dead0
Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Updates Just a Click Away ! Follow Us

InstagramFollow
TelegramFollow
1.2kFollow
1.6kFollow

Join Telegram Channel

Join Whatsapp Channel

Lawyer's Arc Logo

Hey! Lawyer's Archian

One click. One opportunity closer to your legal hustle.
[mc4wp_form]
In Trend
LAW OF TORT

False Imprisonment and Malicious Prosecution Under Tort

LA | Admin
LA | Admin
18/03/2024
Internship Opportunity at Lawyer’s Arc
Right to Freedom of Religion (Articles 25-28)
Advocates (Amendment) Bill, 2025 : The Future of Advocacy in India
Download AIBE 19 Result Live : How & Where to Download Result Aibe XIX
- Advertisement -
Submit Post LAwyer's ArcSubmit Post LAwyer's Arc
- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -
Archives
False Imprisonment and Malicious Prosecution Under Tort
18/03/2024
Lawyer's Arc Internship
Internship Opportunity at Lawyer’s Arc
23/04/2025
Right to Freedom of Religion (Articles 25-28)
18/03/2024
Advocates Amendment Bill
Advocates (Amendment) Bill, 2025 : The Future of Advocacy in India
22/02/2025
AIBE 19 RESULT DOWNLOAD
Download AIBE 19 Result Live : How & Where to Download Result Aibe XIX
23/03/2025

You Might Also Like

VIHAAN KUMAR vs THE STATE OF HARYANA 2025

Pankaj Pandey
Pankaj Pandey
05/10/2025

INDEPENDENT SUGAR CORPORATION LIMITED vs GIRISH SRIRAM JUNEJA, 2025

Pankaj Pandey
Pankaj Pandey
05/10/2025

JYOSTNAMAYEE MISHRA vs THE STATE OF ODISHA 2025

Pankaj Pandey
Pankaj Pandey
05/10/2025

URMILA DIXIT vs SUNIL SHARAN DIXIT, 2025

Pankaj Pandey
Pankaj Pandey
05/10/2025
Previous Next
Lawyer's ArcLawyer's Arc
© Lawyer's Arc 2020-2025. All Rights Reserved.
Hey Lawyer's Archian !
One click. One opportunity closer to your legal hustle.
[mc4wp_form]
Zero spam, Unsubscribe at any time.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?