Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 3
CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 1253 of 2001
PETITIONER:
HARJEET SINGH @ SEETA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF PUNJAB AND ANOTHER
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 06/12/2001
BENCH:
M.B. Shah & B.N. Agrawal
JUDGMENT:
Shah, J.
Leave granted.
This appeal has been filed against the judgment and order dated
10.8.2001 passed by the High Court of Punjab and Haryana in Crl.
Misc. No.10947-M of 2001, whereby the bail granted to the appellant
by the High Court vide its order dated 2.2.2001 in Crl. Misc.
No.1772-M of 2001 has been cancelled.
The appellant who was charge-sheeted for the offence
punishable under sections 302/34 and 307/34 IPC moved an
application for releasing him on bail. That application was rejected by
the Additional Sessions Judge on 26.8.2000. Appellant preferred
Criminal Misc. No.1772-M of 2001 for releasing him on bail before
the learned Single Judge of the High Court. That application was
allowed by Mr. S.S. Nijjar, J. on 2.2.2001 by observing that appellant
caused injury to the deceased on the back of the head and the post
mortem examination shows that there was only one injury on the
head. The Court, therefore, observed that case for bail was made out.
Thereafter, informant filed Criminal Misc. No.10947-M of
2001 for cancellation of bail by pointing out that as per the post
mortem examination there were three injuries on the head of the
deceased. It was also pointed out that similarly situated other accused
Jaspal Singh was not granted bail. The bail was granted on
misconception of facts and hence the misconception order granting
bail to the appellant may be set aside.
The aforesaid Crl. Misc. Petition was placed before Mr. M.L.
Singhal, J., who allowed the same by observing as under:-
The bail appears to have been allowed to Harjeet
Singh @ Seeta only on the feeling that there was only
one injury on the head, whereas infact there were three
injuries on the head and those injuries have been
attributed to Harjeet Singh, Gurbax Singh and Jaspal
Singh. The doctor, who performed the post-mortem
examination on the dead body was of the opinion that the
cause of death was due to head injuries leading to
pulmonary embolism which are sufficient to cause death
in the ordinary course of nature. It was, thus, not a case
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 3
where bail could have been allowed to Harjeet Singh @
Seeta. So, this criminal miscellaneous petition is
allowed. Bail allowed to Harjeet Singh @ Seeta is
cancelled and he is ordered to be taken into custody.
That order is challenged by filing this appeal.
Learned senior counsel Mr. Jain appearing for the appellant
submitted that the impugned order passed by the learned Judge is
totally illegal, unjustified and erroneous and was not consistent with
judicial discipline.
In our view, the submission made by the learned counsel for the
appellant is justified one. It was not open to the other Judge of the
High Court to sit in appeal against the order passed by co-ordinate
bench of the same Court. If the accused had obtained bail order by
misrepresentation or by suppression of facts, it was for the State
Government or the aggrieved party to approach the appropriate higher
forum. In any case, for cancellation of the bail on the ground of mis-
representation or mis-statement, the matter ought to have been placed
before the same Judge.
The law on this aspect is well settled. In Shahzad Hasan Khan
vs. Ishtiaq Hasan Khan and another [(1987) 2 SCC 684], while
dealing with the subsequent bail application, this Court observed,
normally this Court does not interfere with bail matters and the
orders of the High Court are generally accepted to be final relating to
grant or rejection of bail. Thereafter, the Court stated that
longstanding convention and judicial discipline require that
subsequent bail application ought to have been placed before the same
Judge who had passed earlier orders. Placing of such matter before
the same Judge has its roots in principle as it prevents abuse of
process of court inasmuch as an impression is not created that a
litigant is shunning or selecting a court depending on whether the
Court is to his liking or not, and is encouraged to file successive
applications without any new factor having cropped up; if successive
bail applications on the same subject are permitted to be disposed of
by different Judges, there would be conflicting orders. The Court
finally observed that judicial discipline requires that such matters
should be placed before the same Judge, if he is available for orders.
Same principle is required to be followed even for setting aside the
order passed by the Court granting bail on the ground of mis-
representation or mis-statement or suppression of some facts.
Further, in Vikramjit Singh vs. State of Madhya Pradesh
[1992 Supp (3) SCC 62], dealing with similar situation, this Court
observed as under:-
.No bench can comment on the functioning of a
co-ordinate bench of the same court, much less sit in the
judgment as an appellate court over its decision. That
which could not be done directly could also not be done
indirectly. Otherwise, a party aggrieved by an order
passed by one bench of the High Court would be tempted
to attempt to get the matter reopened before another
bench, and there would not be any end to such attempts.
Besides, it was not consistent with the judicial discipline
which must be maintained by courts both in the interest
of administration of justice by assuring the binding
nature of an order which becomes final, and the faith of
the people in the judiciary
In this view of the matter, this appeal is allowed, the impugned
order is set aside. It would be open to the State Government or the
aggrieved party to approach the Court for cancellation of bail on the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 3
ground of any objectionable conduct on the part of the accused and/or
by pointing out that the order granting bail was obtained by
suppression of material fact and in such case matter may be placed
before the same Judge, who granted bail, if available.
..J.
(M.B. SHAH)
..J.
(B. N. AGRAWAL)
December 6 , 2001.