2021 43 1502 32216 Judgement 17-Dec-2021
2021 43 1502 32216 Judgement 17-Dec-2021
2021 43 1502 32216 Judgement 17-Dec-2021
REPORTABLE
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CRIMINAL APPEAL NO. OF 2021
(ARISING OUT OF SLP (CRL.) NO.6335 OF 2021)
VERSUS
PAPPU KUMAR & ANR. ….RESPONDENT(S)
WITH
CRIMINAL APPEAL NO. OF 2021
(ARISING OUT OF SLP(CRL.) NO.7916 OF 2021)
O R D E R
NAGARATHNA J.
Leave granted.
appellant assailing the orders dated 22.07.2021 and 13.09.2021
Signature Not Verified
Digitally signed by R
Natarajan
Date: 2021.12.17
passed by the High Court of Judicature at Patna in Criminal
16:56:11 IST
Reason:
respectively whereby bail has been granted to the accused who is
Naubatpur P.S. Case No.93 of 2020 and Parsa Bazar P.S. Case
No.316 of 2017 respectively.
3. The facts in a nutshell are that the appellant is the mother
eyewitness to the killing of her son and also the person who
lodged the First Information Report being FIR No.93 of 2020 for
offence of murder of her son under section 302 read with section
34 of the Indian Penal Code (for short, the ‘IPC’) and section 27
of the Arms Act against common respondentaccused herein viz.,
Pappu Kumar and one other person named Deepak Kumar.
4. That FIR No.93/2020 dated 19.02.2020 is stated to have
been filed by the appellant herein between 2.30 hrs and 3.00 hrs
in the night stating that her son Rupesh Kumar aged about 35
years was sleeping in the room constructed on the roof top of her
room. She has further stated that she heard the sound of a
person walking and also talking and then she saw that
respondent–accused was present and he had a pistol in his hand
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and when he saw her, he caught her and forcefully tied her
mouth with his Gamchha (towel) and he shot her son on the
head from his pistol in front of her and Deepak Kumar too shot
once at her son’s head. As a result, her son died. Other family
members reached the spot upon hearing the firing sound. But
the accused ran away waiving their pistols.
Kumar for causing serious bullet injury to him, under sections
341, 307 read with section 34 of IPC and section 27 of the Arms
accused herein and his two acquaintances to K.K. Verma, ASI,
Shashtri Nagar PS, District Patna, on 28.12.2017 at 7.57 pm at
given in respect of an incident which occurred on the previous
Shailendra at Sipara. While Rupesh Kumar was returning from
reached a farmer’s house in the nearby village and narrated the
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motorcycle and had lodged FIR No.316/2017.
6. According to the appellant, the respondentaccused herein
2017 by firing at him and an FIR was lodged being FIR No.316 of
appellantinformant and her family to withdraw the complaint,
written complaint of the appellant dated 30.09.2020 was filed to
Kumar.
custody for a period of nine months till he was granted bail by
the High Court.
8. In fact, the Court of Additional Chief Judicial Magistrate at
Patna, took cognizance of the offences and issued summons to
No.316/2017. An order of remand to judicial custody was passed
section 307 of IPC on 06.01.2021.
9. That the accused made an application seeking bail before
Thereafter, the respondentaccused filed an application for grant
impugned order dated 22.07.2021, the High Court granted him
bail in connection with the case being FIR No.93/2020 registered
certain conditions.
registered at Parsa Bazar P.S. for offences under sections 341,
307 read with section 34 of IPC and section 25 of the Arms Act.
Being aggrieved, the appellant has preferred these appeals before
this Court.
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11. We have heard Sri Smarhar Singh, learned counsel for the
respondentaccused and perused the material on record.
though, the said accused may have been acquitted in a few cases,
there are still three cases pending against him. He had attempted
year 2017. Later in the year 2020, he killed the deceased and
absconded for about seven months. The mother of the deceased
appellant herein, is the informant and she has been threatened
granted bail by the High Court contrary to the settled principles
of law and the judgments of this Court.
13. Further it is urged that the High Court has not assigned
respondentaccused is alleged to have committed heinous crimes
counsel for the appellant, the High Court in a very cryptic order
accused. It is the submission of learned counsel for the appellant,
who is mother of the deceased, to allow these appeals by setting
aside the impugned orders. In support of his submission, reliance
has been placed on certain decisions of this Court which shall be
referred to later.
14. Per contra, Sri Basant, learned Senior Counsel for the
contended that accused no.2 in the case is the brotherinlaw of
the deceased and both of them were accused in another case in
witness. The deceased and Deepak Kumar – accused no.2 were
deceased but not the respondentaccused herein. This is a case
of false implication of the respondentaccused by the informant.
15. That the gun was recovered from accused no.2 and there
have been several cases against the deceased and accused no.2
also.
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16. Learned Senior Counsel for the respondentaccused further
contended that respondentaccused was 350 kms away on the
intervening night of 18th and 19th February, 2020. He was not at
the spot of the crime at all. This is evident from the mobile phone
these aspects and granting bail to the respondentaccused.
17. In support of his submission, Sri Basant, learned Senior
Counsel, placed reliance on Gudikanti Narsimhulu & Ors. vs.
Public Prosecutor, High Court of Andhra Pradesh (1978) 1
granting bail. The Court considering an application seeking bail
cannot enter into an indepth analysis of the case so as to hold a
reasons at the time of granting bail. It was contended that bail is
the norm and jail is the exception. Once bail has been granted
by a Court, it is only in very rare cases that there is interference
as it would have the effect of cancellation of bail. That the liberty
warrants.
against him. It was only when a protest petition was filed, that a
chargesheet was filed against him and he was arrested.
respondentaccused are false and hence the impugned orders of
the High Court do not call for any interference in these appeals.
reasoning and they are cryptic and bail has been granted in a
by the High Court, which provides the “reasoning” of the Court
for granting bail, as under :
“Impugned Order dated 22.7.2021
Considering the facts and circumstances of the case and
the fact that false implication against the petitioner
cannot be rule out, the petitioner abovenamed, is
directed to be enlarged on bail on furnishing bail bond of
Rs. 10,000/ (Ten thousand) with two sureties of the like
amount each to the satisfaction of the learned Additional
Chief Judicial Magistrate III, Patna in connection with
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Naubatpur P.S. Case No.93 of 2020, subject to following
conditions:
(ii) If the petitioner tampers with the evidence or
the witnesses of the case, in that case,
prosecution will be at liberty to move for
cancellation of bail of the petitioner.”
Impugned Order dated 13.09.2021
“Considering the facts and circumstances of the case and
the fact petitioner is in custody since 06.01.2021, let the
petitioner, mentioned above, be enlarged on bail on
furnishing bail bond of Rs. 10,000/ (ten thousand) with
two sureties of the like amount each to the satisfaction of
learned Sub JudgeVIII, Patna, in connection with Parza
Bazar P.S. Case No. 316/2017, subject to the following
conditions:
(1) Petitioner shall cooperate in the trial and
shall be properly represented on each and every
date fixed by the Court and shall remain
physically present as directed by the Court and
on his/her absence on two consecutive dates
without sufficient reason, his/her bail bond
shall be cancelled by the Court below.
21. Before proceeding further, it would be useful to refer to the
accused as under:
a) In Gudikanti Narasimhulu (supra), Krishna Iyer, J., while
elaborating on the content and meaning of Article 21 of the
Constitution of India, has also elaborated the factors that
extracted as under:
“7. It is thus obvious that the nature of the charge is
the vital factor and the nature of the evidence also is
pertinent. The punishment to which the party may
be liable, if convicted or conviction is confirmed, also
bears upon the issue.
9. Thus the legal principles and practice validate the
Court considering the likelihood of the applicant
interfering with witnesses for the prosecution or
otherwise polluting the process of justice. It is not
only traditional but rational, in this context, to
enquire into the antecedents of a man who is
applying for bail to find whether he has a bad record
– particularly a record which suggests that he is
likely to commit serious offences while on bail. In
regard to habituals, it is part of criminological
history that a thoughtless bail order has enabled the
bailee to exploit the opportunity to inflict further
about the criminal record of a defendant, is therefore
not an exercise in irrelevance.”
b) Prahlad Singh Bhati vs. NCT of Delhi & ORS – (2001) 4
SCC 280 is a case wherein this Court proceeded to state
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granting bail:
Singh – (2002) 3 SCC 598, speaking through Banerjee, J.,
observed as under:
“3. Grant of bail though being a discretionary order
— but, however, calls for exercise of such a
discretion in a judicious manner and not as a
matter of course. Order for bail bereft of any cogent
reason cannot be sustained. Needless to record,
however, that the grant of bail is dependent upon
the contextual facts of the matter being dealt with
by the court and facts, however, do always vary
from case to case. While placement of the accused
in the society, though may be considered but that
by itself cannot be a guiding factor in the matter of
grant of bail and the same should and ought always
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to be coupled with other circumstances warranting
the grant of bail. The nature of the offence is one of
the basic considerations for the grant of bail —
more heinous is the crime, the greater is the chance
of rejection of the bail, though, however, dependent
on the factual matrix of the matter.”
observed in paragraph 11 as under :
“11. The law in regard to grant or refusal of bail is
very well settled. The court granting bail should
exercise its discretion in a judicious manner and not
as a matter of course. Though at the stage of
granting bail a detailed examination of evidence and
elaborate documentation of the merit of the case
need not be undertaken, there is a need to indicate
in such orders reasons for prima facie concluding
why bail was being granted particularly, where the
accused is charged of having committed a serious
offence. Any order devoid of such reasons would
suffer from non application of mind. It is also
necessary for the court granting bail to consider
among other circumstances, the following factors
also before granting bail; they are:
a) The nature of accusation and the severity of
punishment in case of conviction and the
nature of supporting evidence.
b) Reasonable apprehension of tampering with
the witness or apprehension of threat to the
complainant.
e) Gobarbhai Naranbhai Singala vs. State of Gujarat &
filed under Article 136 of the Constitution of India. In the
said case reliance was placed on Panchanan Mishra vs.
Digambar Mishra – (2005) 3 SCC 143 wherein in para 13
it was observed as under:
“13. The object underlying the cancellation of bail is
to protect the fair trial and secure justice being
done to the society by preventing the accused who
is set at liberty by the bail order from tampering
with the evidence in the heinous crime … It hardly
requires to be stated that once a person is released
on bail in serious criminal cases where the
punishment is quite stringent and deterrent, the
accused in order to get away from the clutches of
the same indulge in various activities like
tampering with the prosecution witnesses,
threatening the family members of the deceased
victim and also create problems of law and order
situation.”
Amarmani Tripathi – (2005) 8 SCC 21, this Court noted
respondent therein had been named in ten other criminal
cases in the last 25 years or so, out of which five cases
completely ignored the general principle for grant of bail in
sentence, if convicted, is death or life imprisonment.
It was further observed that in the impugned order
therein the findings recorded touched upon the merits of
order of acquittal was being passed, contrary to what had
been said in Amarmani Tripathi which is that only a brief
examination has to be made to satisfy about the facts and
circumstances or a prima facie case.
Lalla Bahu & Anr. – (2012) 9 SCC 446, observed that
though the period of custody is a relevant factor, the same
has to be weighed simultaneously with the totality of the
are to be weighed in the scale of collective cry and desire
juxtaposition to individual liberty, was underlined.
16
g) In Neeru Yadav vs. State of UP & Anr. – (2016) 15 SCC
422, after referring to a catena of judgments of this Court
paragraphs 15 and 18 as under:
x x x
h) In Anil Kumar Yadav v. State (NCT of Delhi) – (2018) 12
SCC 129, this Court has spelt out some of the significant
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deciding whether to grant bail:
i) Recently in Bhoopindra Singh vs. State of Rajasthan &
Anr. (Criminal Appeal No. 1279 of 2021), this Court has
observed as under in the matter of exercise of an appellate
power to determine whether bail has been granted for valid
reasons as distinct from an application for cancellation of
SCC 118:
“16. The considerations that guide the power of an
appellate court in assessing the correctness of an
order granting bail stand on a different footing
from an assessment of an application for the
cancellation of bail. The correctness of an order
granting bail is tested on the anvil of whether
there was an improper or arbitrary exercise of the
discretion in the grant of bail. The test is whether
the order granting bail is perverse, illegal or
unjustified. On the other hand, an application for
cancellation of bail is generally examined on the
anvil of the existence of supervening
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22. On the aspect of the duty to accord reasons for a decision
arrived at by a court, or for that matter, even a quasijudicial
authority, it would be useful to refer to a judgment of this Court
paragraph 47 the law on the point. The relevant principles for
the purpose of this case are extracted as under:
(a) Insistence on recording of reasons is meant to serve the
wider principle of justice that justice must not only be
done it must also appear to be done as well.
(b) Recording of reasons also operates as a valid restraint on
any possible arbitrary exercise of judicial and quasi
judicial or even administrative power.
(e) The ongoing judicial trend in all countries committed to
rule of law and constitutional governance is in favour of
reasoned decisions based on relevant facts. This is
virtually the lifeblood of judicial decisionmaking justifying
the principle that reason is the soul of justice.
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(f) Judicial or even quasijudicial opinions these days can be
as different as the judges and authorities who deliver
them. All these decisions serve one common purpose
which is to demonstrate by reason that the relevant
factors have been objectively considered. This is important
for sustaining the litigants' faith in the justice delivery
system.
(i) Reasons in support of decisions must be cogent, clear and
succinct. A pretence of reasons or “rubberstamp reasons”
is not to be equated with a valid decisionmaking process.
(k) In all common law jurisdictions judgments play a vital role
in setting up precedents for the future. Therefore, for
development of law, requirement of giving reasons for the
decision is of the essence and is virtually a part of “due
process”.
context of a dismissal of a revision petition by a cryptic order by
the National Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission, reliance
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reasons while deciding a matter.
24. The Latin maxim “cessante ratione legis cessat ipsa lex”
meaning “reason is the soul of the law, and when the reason of
apposite.
the facts that have a bearing in the case, particularly, when the
but are supported by adequate material brought on record so as
conclusion must be supported by reasons and must be arrived
at after having regard to the vital facts of the case brought on
record. Due consideration must be given to facts suggestive of
the nature of crime, the criminal antecedents of the accused, if
conviction visàvis the offence/s alleged against an accused.
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26. We have extracted the relevant portions of the impugned
portions are the only portions forming part of the “reasoning” of
the High court while granting bail. As noted from the aforecited
reasons while granting bail particularly when the case is at the
initial stage and the allegations of the offences by the accused
elaborate details recorded to give an impression that the case is
acquittal while passing an order on an application for grant of
between the nature of the allegations made against the accused;
severity of the punishment if the allegations are proved beyond
reasonable doubt and would result in a conviction; reasonable
apprehension of the witnesses being influenced by the accused;
prosecution; criminal antecedents of the accused; and a prima
facie satisfaction of the Court in support of the charge against
the accused.
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accordance with the settled principles of law having regard to the
crime alleged to be committed by the accused on the one hand
and ensuring purity of the trial of the case on the other.
bereft of the relevant reasons cannot result in grant of bail. It
before a higher forum.
29. In view of the aforesaid discussion, we shall now consider
the facts of the present case. The allegations against respondent
accused as well as the contentions raised at the Bar have been
following aspects of the case would emerge:
respondent accused herein. The other case, namely, FIR
No. 93 of 2020 is with regard to the offence of murder of
with Section 34 of the IPC and Section 27 of the Arms Act
Deepak Kumar. Thus, offences alleged against respondent
accused herein are serious offences visavis the very same
mother of the deceased who is stated to be an eyewitness.
Thus, the allegations against the respondent accused vis
Kumar in both the cases.
history of enmity between the accused and the deceased.
c) The accusation against the respondentaccused is that he
two occasions.
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d) The respondentaccused herein has been named in about
eight cases and though he may have been acquitted in a
Thus, it is inferred that respondentaccused has criminal
antecedents.
e) It has also come on record that the respondent accused
against him. Therefore, his arrest was delayed.
deceased.
absconding or threatening the witnesses if on bail which
would have a vital bearing on the trial of the cases.
purpose of commencement of the trial in right earnest in
discretion could not have been exercised in favour of the
respondentaccused in the instant cases.
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i) In the impugned order dated 13.09.2021, the High Court
Election as Mukhiya of Chhotki Tangraila Gram Panchayat
but this fact has not been taken into consideration in the
regard to grant of bail.
30. Having considered the aforesaid facts of the present case in
think that these cases are fit cases for grant of bail to
Rupesh Kumar.
31. The High court has lost sight of the aforesaid vital aspects
of the case and in very cryptic orders has granted bail to the
respondentaccused. For the aforesaid reasons, we find that the
High Court was not right in allowing the applications for bail
passed by the High Court are set aside. The appeals are allowed.
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cancelled and he is directed to surrender before the concerned
jail authorities within a period of two weeks from today.
……………………………..J.
[L. NAGESWARA RAO]
…………………………….J.
[B.R. GAVAI]
……………………………J.
[B.V. NAGARATHNA]
NEW DELHI;
17TH DECEMBER, 2021.