Delhi HC Upholds Travel Rights, Quashes Passport Impounding Order

The Delhi High Court has set aside an order by the Ministry of External Affairs impounding the passport of Yogesh Raheja. The court ruled the action was legally unsustainable, clarifying that an FIR's registration alone does not constitute pending criminal proceedings under the Passports Act. It emphasized that the right to travel abroad is integral to personal liberty under Article 21 of the Constitution. The judgment reinforces that passport authorities must exercise their powers strictly in accordance with the law and judicial principles.

Key Points: Delhi HC Sets Aside Passport Impounding Order, Affirms Travel Right

  • Court sets aside MEA's passport impound order
  • Reaffirms right to travel as part of personal liberty
  • Clarifies 'pending criminal proceedings' under Passports Act
  • Authorities must act strictly per statutory conditions
2 min read

Delhi HC sets aside passport impounding order, reaffirms citizen's right to travel abroad

Delhi High Court quashes MEA's passport impounding order, reaffirms citizen's right to travel abroad under Article 21. Key legal interpretation on pending criminal proceedings.

"mere registration or pendency of an FIR does not amount to pendency of criminal proceedings - Sandeep Kapur"

New Delhi, February 26

In a significant judgment, the Delhi High Court on Thursday set aside an order issued by the Ministry of External Affairs impounding the passport of Yogesh Raheja, erstwhile Director of Raheja Developers.

Justice Purushaindra Kumar Kaurav held that the action was legally unsustainable and reaffirmed the legal position governing pendency of criminal proceedings under the Passports Act.

The petitioner was represented by Senior Partner Sandeep Kapur of Karanjawala and Co., along with Rahul Agarwal and Rishabh Munjal, Associates. The impugned orders were challenged on the ground that no criminal proceedings were pending against the petitioner at the time he applied for renewal of his passport.

Arguing the matter, Sandeep Kapur submitted that mere registration or pendency of an FIR does not amount to pendency of criminal proceedings within the meaning of Sections 6(2)(f) and 10(3)(e) of the Act. He relied on Clause 5(vi) of the Office Memorandum dated October 10, 2019, which clarifies that criminal proceedings are considered pending only when a case has been instituted before a court of law and the court has taken cognisance.

Accepting these submissions, the High Court held that the impounding order could not withstand judicial scrutiny. The Court observed that when the petitioner applied for passport renewal, the trial court had not taken cognisance of the FIR and therefore no criminal proceedings were pending against him.

The Court also relied on the judgment of the Supreme Court of India in Mahesh Kumar Agarwal v Union of India, which held that the purpose of Sections 6(2)(f) and 10(3)(e) is to ensure that an accused remains amenable to court jurisdiction and that indefinite denial of passport renewal would be a disproportionate restriction on personal liberty.

Reaffirming that the right to travel abroad forms part of personal liberty under Article 21 of the Constitution, the Court emphasised that passport authorities must act strictly in accordance with statutory conditions and established judicial principles while exercising powers to impound passports.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Common sense prevails. The law is clear, but officials sometimes act arbitrarily. This judgment will help many ordinary people who get stuck in legal limbo because of an FIR that may not even lead to a chargesheet. Good for businesspeople like Mr. Raheja too.
R
Rohit P
While I agree with the principle, we must be careful. What about white-collar criminals who might flee the country? The court has drawn a fine line – cognisance by the court is the key moment. The system should work faster to decide if an FIR has merit.
S
Sarah B
As someone who works internationally, this is a huge relief. The uncertainty of passport renewal when there's any legal issue is a nightmare. The court has provided much-needed clarity. Article 21 must be respected.
V
Vikram M
A very balanced judgment. It protects citizens from harassment but doesn't give a free pass to actual accused. The reference to the Supreme Court's Mahesh Kumar Agarwal case is spot on. Indefinite restriction is not the answer. Our judiciary is a pillar of democracy.
K
Kavya N
This is why we need a strong and independent judiciary. The MEA officials should be more diligent. An innocent person's career and family commitments abroad can get ruined due to such casual orders. Hope this sets a precedent.
M
Michael C

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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