The constitutional philosophy of personal liberty is an idealistic view, the curtailment of liberty for reasons of States’ security, public order, disruption of national economic discipline etc. being envisaged as necessary evil to be administered under strict constitutional restrictions. In Ichhudevi v. Union of India, Bhagwati, J. Spoke of this judicial commitment: “The court has always regarded personal liberty as the most precious possession of mankind and refused to tolerate illegal detention, regardless of the social cost involved in the release of a possible renegade."
The constitutional philosophy of personal liberty is an idealistic view, the curtailment of liberty for reasons of States’ security, public order, disruption of national economic discipline etc. being envisaged as necessary evil to be administered under strict constitutional restrictions. In Ichhudevi v. Union of India, Bhagwati, J. Spoke of this judicial commitment: “The court has always regarded personal liberty as the most precious possession of mankind and refused to tolerate illegal detention, regardless of the social cost involved in the release of a possible renegade."