Bail Application
Accused
can directly approach the High Court and Sessions Court for regular Bail, not
necessary that accused should apply to the Magistrate first, Supreme court [ Justice Vikramajit Sen and Justice K S Radhakrishnan].
In a path-breaking
Judgment, a two-Judge Bench of the Supreme Court has held that there are no
restrictions on the High Court or Sessions Court to entertain an application
for bail, provided, accused is in custody. The judgment has put an to end the
decades old practice of first filing a regular Bail Application before a
Magistrate having jurisdiction, and get it rejected for the purpose of
approaching the Sessions Court or High Court for bail. The case arises out of a
Special Leave Petition seeking regular bail under Section 439 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure (CrPC), which was declined by the High Court of Mumbai, with
the observations that it is the Magistrate whose jurisdiction has necessarily
to be invoked and not of the High Court or the Sessions Judge. The prayer by
the accused before the High Court was to permit him to surrender to its jurisdiction,
and thus by offering himself to custody, seeking grant of regular bail under
Section 439 of the Code, on such terms and conditions as may be deemed fit and
proper. According to the Single Judge, when the Accused’s plea to surrender
before the Court is accepted and he is assumed to be in its custody, the police
would be deprived of getting his custody, which is not contemplated by law, and
thus, the Accused “is required to be arrested or otherwise he has to surrender
before the Court which can send him to remand either to the police custody or
to the Magisterial custody and this can only be done under Section 167 of CrPC
by the Magistrate and that order cannot be passed at the High Court level.”
While setting aside the High Court Judgement,
the Supreme Court has elaborated
the scope of Section 437 and 439 of Cr.P.C.
In Paragraph No-11, it holds; “Some poignant particulars of Section 437
CrPC may be pinpointed. First, whilst Section 497(1) of the old Code alluded to
an accused being “brought before a Court”, the present provision postulates the
accused being “brought before a Court other than the High Court or a Court of
Session” in respect of the commission of any non-bailable offence. As observed
in Gurcharan Singh vs State (1978) 1 SCC 118, there is no provision in the CrPC
dealing with the production of an accused before the Court of Session or the
High Court. But it must also be immediately noted that no provision
categorically prohibits the production of an accused before either of these Courts.”
“The difference of language manifests the sublime differentiation in the two
provisions, and, therefore, there is no justification in giving the word
‘custody’ the same or closely similar meaning and content as arrest or
detention. Furthermore, while Section 437 severally curtails the power of the
Magistrate to grant bail in context of the commission of non-bailable offences
punishable with death or imprisonment for life, the two higher Courts have only
the procedural requirement of giving notice of the Bail application to the
Public Prosecutor, which requirement is also ignorable if circumstances so
demand. The regimes regulating the powers of the Magistrate on the one hand and
the two superior Courts are decidedly and intentionally not identical, but vitally
and drastically dissimilar. Indeed, the only complicity that can be
contemplated is the conundrum of ‘Committal of cases to the Court of Session’
because of a possible hiatus created by the CrPC. Meaning of Custody: Since the
terms ‘custody’, ‘detention’ or ‘arrest’ have not been defined in the CrPC, the
Court, elaborately and eruditely discusses the meaning of ‘custody’. The Court relies on Justice Iyer’s decision
in Niranjan Singh vs Prabhakar Rajaram Kharote (1980) 2 SCC 559 and quotes from
the Judgment, thus ; “7. When is a
person in custody, within the meaning of Section 439 CrPC? When he is in duress
either because he is held by the investigating agency or other police or allied
authority or is under the control of the court having been remanded by judicial
order, or having offered himself to the court’s jurisdiction and submitted to
its orders by physical presence. No lexical dexterity nor precedential
profusion is needed to come to the realistic conclusion that he who is under
the control of the court or is in the physical hold of an officer with coercive
power is in custody for the purpose of Section 439. This word is of elastic
semantics but its core meaning is that the law has taken control of the person.
The equivocatory quibblings and hide-and-seek niceties sometimes heard in court
that the police have taken a man into informal custody but not arrested him,
have detained him for interrogation but not taken him into formal custody and
other like terminological dubieties are unfair evasions of the
straightforwardness of the law. “ The Court comes to a conclusion that since
the Magistrate is completely barred from granting bail to a person accused even
of an offence punishable by death or imprisonment for life, a Superior Court
such as Court of Session, should not be incapacitated from considering a bail
application especially keeping in perspective that its powers are comparatively
unfettered under Section 439 of the CrPC. The Court gave an extended meaning of
the word “Custody” relying on Justice
Krishna Iyer, who authored Niranjan Singh v. Prabhakar Rajaram Kharote and quoting (SCC p. 563, para 9) “He can be in
custody not merely when the police arrests him, produces him before a
Magistrate and gets a remand to judicial or other custody. He can be stated to
be in judicial custody when he surrenders before the court and submits to its
directions.” If the third sentence of para 48 is discordant to Niranjan Singh,
the view of the coordinate Bench of earlier vintage must prevail, and this
discipline demands and constrains us also to adhere to Niranjan Singh; ergo, we
reiterate that a person is in custody no sooner he surrenders before the police
or before the appropriate Court.” Regarding the power of Sessions Court the
Court proceeds as follows; “We are unable to locate any provision in the CrPC
which prohibits an accused from moving the Court of Session for such a relief
except, theoretically, Section 193 which also only prohibits it from taking
cognizance of an offence as a Court of original jurisdiction. This embargo does
not prohibit the Court of Session from adjudicating upon a plea for bail”. It
appears to us that till the committal of case to the Court of Session, Section
439 can be invoked for the purpose of pleading for bail. If administrative
difficulties are encountered, such as, where there are several Additional
Session Judges, they can be overcome by enabling the accused to move the
Sessions Judge, or by further empowering the Additional Sessions Judge hearing
other Bail Applications whether post committal or as the Appellate Court, to
also entertain Bail Applications at the pre-committal stage. Dealing with the
issue on the touchstone of Constitution, the Court holds ; (Para- 7) “ Article
21 of the Constitution states that no person shall be deprived of his life or
personal liberty except according to procedure established by law. We are
immediately reminded of three sentences from the Constitution Bench decision in
P.S.R. Sadhanantham vs Arunachalam , which we appreciate as poetry in prose –
“Article 21, in its sublime brevity, guards human liberty by insisting on the
prescription of procedure established by law, not fiat as sine qua non for
deprivation of personal freedom. And those procedures so established must be
fair, not fanciful, nor formal nor flimsy, as laid down in Maneka Gandhi case.
So, it is axiomatic that our Constitutional jurisprudence mandates the State
not to deprive a person of his personal liberty without adherence to fair
procedure laid down by law”. Therefore, it seems to us that constriction or
curtailment of personal liberty cannot be justified by a conjectural dialectic.
The only restriction allowed as a general principle of law common to all legal
systems is the period of 24 hours post-arrest on the expiry of which an accused
must mandatorily be produced in a Court so that his remand or bail can be
judicially considered.
Disclaimer: All the contents are for general use and information. Consult your lawyer before acting.
Disclaimer: All the contents are for general use and information. Consult your lawyer before acting.
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