Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
JASPAL SINGH GILL
DATE OF JUDGMENT25/06/1984
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
CITATION:
1984 AIR 1503 1984 SCR (3) 993
1984 SCC (3) 555 1984 SCALE (1)990
ACT:
Special Powers of the High Court to enlarge an accused
on bail under section 439 (1) read with section 437 (3) and
482 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, scope of.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent along with three others were accused of
having committed offences punishable under ss. 3,5 and 9 of
the Official Secrets Act, 1923 read with s. 120 B of the
Indian Penal Code and therefore committed to the Court of
Sessions for the said offences which are of a serious
nature. During the investigation, the respondent made an
application for bail before the Additional Sessions Judge,
New Delhi and it was rejected in January, 1984. Then again
he made another application for bail before the Sessions
Court. Before the said application could be taken up he made
an application under s. 482 of the Criminal Procedure Code
before the High Court of Delhi for bail. The learned Judge
of the High Court who heard the bail application went into
the merits of the case and after holding that the material
before the Court was insufficient to sustain the conviction
of the respondent proceeded to enlarge him on bail subject
to his furnishing a Personal bond in the sum of Rs. 5,000/-
with one surety in the like amount. However, the very same
Learned Judge had dismissed earlier the bail application of
Jasbir Singh who was the employee of the respondent.
Aggrieved by the order of the High Court enlarging the
respondent on bail, the prosecution has filed this special
leave petition for revoking the said order of bail:
Allowing the petition, the Court.
^
HELD: 1:1. The Court before granting bail in cases
involving non-bailable offences particularly where the trial
has not yet commenced should
994
take into consideration various matters such as the nature
and seriousness of the offence, the character of the
evidence, circumstance which are peculiar to the accused, a
reasonable possibility of the presence of the accused not
being secured at the trial, reasonable apprehension of
witnesses being tampered with, the larger undressed of the
public or the State and similar other considerations.
Further, the Court should exercise a greater degree of care
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in enlarging on bail an accused who is charged with the
offence punishable under s. 3 of the Official Secrets Act
when it relates to military affairs. Here the offence
punishable under s. 3 of the Official Secrets Act, 1923 with
which the respondent is charged relates to military affairs
and it is punishable with imprisonment which may extend to
fourteen years.
The State v. Captain Jagjit Singh, A.I.R. 1962 S.C. 253
Gurcharan Singh & Ors v. State (Delhi Admn.), [1978] 2
S.C.R. 358; Gudikanti Narsaimhulu & Ors. v. Public
Prosecutor, High Court of Andhra Pradesh, [1978] 2 S.C.R.
361, referred to [998C-D; 998A; 997H]
1:2. The decision of the High Court that the material
collected by the prosecution and the evidence to be adduced
at the trial would not be sufficient to sustain a conviction
appears to be a premature one in the circumstances of this
case. The allegations made by the prosecution which no doubt
have still to be established at the trial suggest that the
respondent and the persons accused alongwith him are persons
of easy conscience in so far as the interests and security
of the country is concerned. The current situation in the
country is such that it can easily be exploited by
unscrupulous men to their own or to some foreign power’s
advantage. These aspects of the case do not appear to have
been considered by the High Court. Further, while dismissing
the bail application of Jasbir Singh on April 24, 1984, the
learned Judge of the High Court had relied on the decision
of this Court in Captain Jagjit Singh’s case, he has not
even referred to that decision while granting bail to the
respondent on May 3, 1984. Some of the observations made by
the High Court against the sustainability of the case of
criminal conspiracy alleged by the prosecution at this stage
were not called for. The circumstance of this case are such
that the question whether the case of criminal conspiracy
had been made out or not should have been left to be decided
by the trial court at the end of the trial on a
consideration of the entire evidence adduced in the case.
Therefore, the High Court should not have enlarged the
respondent on bail in the larger interest of the State.
[998E; 999B-F]
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Special Leave Petition
(Criminal) No. 1543 of 1984.
From the Judgment and order dated the 3rd day of May,
1984 of the Delhi High Court in Crl. M(M) No. 421 of 1984
995
R.N. Poddar for the Petitioner.
Miss Rani Jethmalani for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by B
VENKATARAMIAH, J. Four persons-Maj. General (Retd.)
F.D. Larkins, Air Vice Marshal (Retd.) K.H. Larkins, Lt.
Col. (Retd.) Jasbir Singh and Jaspal Singh Gill alias Jassi
Gill, the respondent herein, were accused of having
committed offences punishable under sections 3, 5 and 9 of
the Official Secrets Act, 1923 read with section 120-B of
the Indian Penal Code and of them F.D. Larkins and Jasbir
Singh were also accused of having committed the offence
punishable under section 6 of the Official Secrets Act, 1923
in a complaint filed by the Deputy Commissioner of Police,
Special Branch, Delhi with the authorisation of the
Government of India before the Additional Chief Metropolitan
Magistrate, Patiala House, New Delhi.
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The prosecution case appears to rest inter alia on the
following facts: On March 24, 1983, Group Captain Jasjit
Singh informed the Air Vice Marshal (now Air Marshal) Shri
S. Raghavendran that for some days immediately prior to that
date AVM (Retd.) K.H. Larkins then resident of Azad
Apartments, Mehrauli Road, New Delhi, under whom he had
served earlier was inducing him to pass on secret manuals of
aircrafts used by the Indian Air Force for a consideration
of Rs. 20,000/- per document. AVM Raghavendran brought this
to the notice of his superiors. Thereafter further
information was collected and the movements of AVM (Retd.)
K.H. Larkins were kept under observation. The links of the
said K.H. Larkins and his brother Major General (Retd.) F.D.
Larkins were discovered. A First Information Report was
registered at Police Station, Tughlak Road, New Delhi.
On November 11, 1983 raids were conducted at the
residence of K.H. Larkins as well as that of F.D. Larkins.
Certain incriminating items are stated to have been
recovered from the latter’s
996
house. It is alleged that on interrogation after arrest F.D.
Larkins and K.H. Larkins confessed that they had been
passing on classified information relating to the defence of
the country to a foreign agency.
It is further alleged that Major General (Retd). F.D.
Larkins stated that he had engaged Lt. Col. (Retd.) Jasbir
Singh as his sub-agent for procuring secret/restricted
documents and manuals relating to armament. On this
disclosure the search of the house of Jasbir Singh was
conducted on November 13 1983 and he was arrested and
remanded to police custody. It is stated that on
interrogation he disclosed that he had been passing on
secret/classified information to Major General (Retd.) F.D.
Larkins and Jaspal Singh Gill, the respondent, for monetary
consideration. He appears to have further disclosed that
many secret/restricted manuals and documents were
unauthorisedly got issued to him from D.G.I. and EME
libraries to which he gained access through the good offices
of certain Army Officers and by impersonating himself as a
serving officer when actually he was retired and that the
information contained in these documents and manuals was
passed on by him to Major General (Retd.) F.D. Larkins and
Jaspal Singh Gill alias Jassi Gill resident of 82, Sunder
Nagar, New Delhi, the respondent, who represented a private
firm namely, M/s EMGEE International Pvt. Ltd, and with whom
he, Lt. Col (Retd.) Jasbir Singh, was also working as
consultant. On the basis of the said disclosure made by the
said Jasbir Singh the search of the house of Jaspal Singh
Gill alias Jassi Gill, the respondent herein was conducted
at 82, Sunder Nagar, New Delhi. Some secret/restricted
documents alongwith a Defence telephone directory connected
with the Army are stated to have been recovered from his
possession and he was arrested on November 19, 1983.
It is alleged that the respondent herein had obtained
classified information on defence matters through the
aforesaid Jasbir Singh for monetary consideration and had
passed on the information to the U.S. Intelligence Operator.
During the search of the house of Jaspal Singh as many as 13
invitation cards from the U.S. Officials for cocktail and
dinner parties are alleged to have been recovered showing
the association of the respondent
997
with foreign agents as defined in section 4 of the Official
Secrets Act. It is alleged that the respondent was paying
Rs. 1,000/- per month to the Jasbir Singh and Rs. 1,000/-
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per month to the wife of Jasbir Singh.
It is further alleged that the copy of the Defence
telephone directory was a restricted document, the
disclosure of the contents of which to unauthorised persons
is prejudicial to the interest and security of the country.
All the accused persons including the respondent have
been committed to the Court of Sessions for the various
offences which are really of a serious nature.
During the investigation, the respondent made an
application for bail before the Addl. Sessions Judge, New
Delhi and it was rejected in January, 1984. Then again he
made another application for bail before the Sessions Court.
Before the said application could be taken up, he made an
application under section 482 of the Criminal Procedure Code
before the High Court of Delhi for bail. The learned Judge
of the High Court who heard the bail application went into
the merits of the case and after holding that the material
before the Court was insufficient to sustain the conviction
of the respondent proceeded to enlarge him on bail subject
to his furnishing a personal bond in the sum of Rs. 5,000/-
with one surety in the like amount. It may be stated here
that the very same learned Judge had dismissed earlier the
bail application of Jasbir Singh who was the employee of the
respondent. Aggrieved by the order of the High Court
enlarging the respondent on bail, the prosecution has filed
this Special Leave Petition for revoking the said order of
bail.
The offence punishable under section 3 of the Official
Secrets Act, 1923 with which the respondent is charged
relates to military affairs and it is punishable with
imprisonment which may extend to fourteen years. This Court
in The State v. Captain Jagjit Singh has indicated that the
Court should exercise a
998
greater degree of care in enlarging on bail an accused who
is charged with the offence punishable under section 3 of
the Official Secrets Act when it relates to military
affairs. I have also gone through the decisions of this
Court in Gurcharan Singh & Ors. v. State (Delhi
Administration) and Gudikanti Narasimhulu & Ors. v. Public
Prosecutor, High Court of Andhra Pradesh which deal with the
principles governing the grant of bail. It may be mentioned
here that in the last of the above cases, the accused had
been acquitted by the trial court but convicted by the High
Court on appeal. On a consideration of the above three
decisions, I am of the view that the Court before granting
bail in cases involving non-bailable offences particularly
where the trial has not yet commenced should take into
consideration various matters such as the nature and
seriousness of the offence, the character of the evidence,
circumstances which are peculiar to the accused, a
reasonable possibility of the presence of the accused not
being secured at the trial, reasonable apprehension of
witnesses being tampered with, the larger interests of the
public or the State and similar other considerations.
On going through the order passed by the High Court, I
feel that its decision that the material collected by the
prosecutions and the evidence to be adduced at the trial
would not be sufficient to sustain a conviction appears to
be a premature one in the circumstances of this case. Since
the trial is yet to begin, I do not propose to say anything
more at this stage lest it should prejudice either the
accused or the prosecution than observing that on a perusal
of the complaint and the other material available in the
case, it cannot reasonably be stated that the prosecution
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case against the respondent is such that it can be thrown
out at the threshold. It appears that a prima facie case is
made out against the respondent. The gravity of the offences
is quite obvious. They relate to the security of the State,
Espionage and intelligence are utilised to pass on
information regarding military plans, equipment, technical
advances etc. of one country to another. Naturally passing
on of such information from our country to a foreign country
is bound to be most harmful to our country. The
999
persons accused alongwith the respondent are admittedly ex-
military men well versed in military affairs who are capable
of establishing bridges with the sensitive sections of the
defence services. The respondent is also alleged to be
having some dealings with the defence department and Jasbir
Singh is in the employment of the respondent. The
allegations made by the prosecution which no doubt have
still to be established at the trial suggest that the
respondent and the persons accused alongwith him are persons
of easy conscience in so far as the interests and security
of the country are concerned. The current situation in the
country is such that it can be easily be exploited by
unscrupulous men to their own or to some foreign power’s
advantage. These aspects of the case do not appear to have
been considered by the High Court. It is seen that while
dismissing the bail application of Jasbir Singh on April 24,
1984, the learned Judge of the High Court had relied on the
decision of this Court in Captain Jagjit Singh’s case
(supra), he has not even referred to that decision while
granting bail to the respondent on May 3, 1984. Some of the
observations made by the High Court against the
sustainability of the case of criminal conspiracy alleged by
the prosecution at this stage were not called for. The
circumstances of this case are such that the question
whether the case of criminal conspiracy had been made out or
not should have been left to be decided by the trial court
at the end of the trial on a consideration of the entire
evidence adduced in the case.
In the circumstances, I am of the view that the High
Court should not have enlarged the respondent on bail in the
larger interests of the state. It is urged that the
respondent is a person who has undergone a cardiac operation
and needs constant medical attention. I am sure that the
prison authorities will arrange for proper treatment of the
respondent whenever the deed for it arises.
I am informed that in a criminal revision petition
filed by one of the accused, the High Court has stayed the
trial of the case The High Court is requested to dispose of
the case early since the accused are all in judicial
custody.
The order of bail passed by the High Court was
suspended by this Court by an order made on June 4, 1984 and
the respon-
1000
dent was ordered to be re-arrested and kept in judicial
custody The respondent is now taken back into judicial
custody.
In the result, the order of the High Court enlarging
the respondent on bail is set aside and the respondent is
directed to remain judicial custody until further orders to
be passed by a competent court.
The trial court shall proceed to dispose of the case
without feeling itself bound by any of the observations of
the High Court.
S.R. Petition allowed
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