Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE THROUGH DELHI ADMINISTRATION
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SANJAY GANDHI
DATE OF JUDGMENT05/05/1978
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
SHINGAL, P.N.
CITATION:
1978 AIR 961 1978 SCR (3) 950
1978 SCC (1) 411
CITATOR INFO :
D 1985 SC 969 (12)
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950, Art. 136-Appeal by special
leave against an order rejecting an application for
cancellation of bail-Court cannot permit use of new material
against accused.
Constitution of India, 1950, Art. 136-Appeal by special
leave against an order rejecting an application for
cancellation of the bail-Interference with the findings of
the High Court as to whether the accused tampered with
prosecution witnesses, when justified.
Bail, cancellation of--Power to cancel bail, must be
exercised with care and circumspection and in appropriate
cases-Crl.P.C. (Act 11 of 1974), 1973, s. 439(2).
Bail cancellation of-Grounds must bear casual connection
with same act or conduct of accused--CrI.P.C. (Act 2 of
1974). 1973, Ss. 439(2) r/w 437(5).
Burden of proof, extent of-In an application for
cancellation of bail, the proof of the plea that witnesses
turned hostile because they were won over by the accused
need not be beyond a reasonable doubt-Evidence Act, 1872-
Ss.3, 101-104 r/w Crl.P.C. S. 439(2).
HEADNOTE:
The respondent who was arraigned as accused No. 2 in a
prosecution for offences u/Ss. 120B r/w Ss. 409, 435 and 201
I.P.C. instituted by the Central Bureau of Investigation in
the Court of the Chief Metropolitan Magistrate, Delhi was
granted anticipatory bail, by the High Court of Delhi. When
the Committal Proceedings commenced in the Court of the
Chief Metropolitan Magistrate, Delhi on February 20, 1978 as
per the time schedule fixed by this Court, the two approvers
in the case turned hostile, resiled from their statements
made to the police u/s 161 of Crl.P.C., and retracted the
confessions made to the Chief Metropolitan Magistrate. An
application filed for cancellation of the respondents bail
was dismissed by a learned single Judge of the Delhi High
Court on 11-4-1978.
Allowing the appeal in part, the Court
HELD : 1. In an appeal by special leave against an order
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rejecting ax application for cancellation of bail, no new
material which was not available to the High Court will
normally be allowed to be relied upon by the State, it would
be unfair to the respondent to make use of that material
without giving him an adequate opportunity to meet it on the
ground that the additional data came into existence after
the High Court gave its judgment. Though, in appropriate
cases, the Court has the power to take additional evidence,
that power has to be exercised sparingly, particularly in
appeals brought under Article 136 of the Constitution. [956
D-E]
2. In an appeal by special leave against an order
rejecting an application for cancellation of the bail, the
High Court’s findings are normally treated by this Court as
binding on issues like : whether the prosecution has
succeeded in proving its case that the respondent has
tampered with its witnesses and that
951
there is a reasonable apprehension that he will continue to
indulge in that course of Conduct, if he is allowed to
remain at large. If two views of the evidence are
reasonably possible and the High Court has taken one view,
this Court will be disinclined to interfere therewith in an
appeal under Art. 136 of the Constitution. (958 E-F)
In the instant case :-(a) the High Court has rejected
incontrovertible -evidence on hypertechnical
considerationsthough it points in one direction only,
leaving no manner of doubt that therespondent has
misused the facility afforded to him by that Court by
granting anticipatory bail to him(b) Even excluding the
last incident in regard to Charan Singh which is
really first in point of time and though it is corroborated
by an entry in the General Diary, the other evidence viz.,
(i) Yadav’s complaint of the 14th February, (ii) Khedkar’s
complaint of even date, (iii) Yadav’s admission in his
evidence that he did make the written complaint in spite of
the fact that he had turned hostile, (iv) the affidavits of
Sat Pal Singh, Ganpat Singh and Digambar Das in regard to
the incident of the 17th and (v) the affidavit of Sarup
Singh regarding the incident of February 28. furnish
satisfactory proof that the respondent has abused his
liberty by attempting to suborn the prosecution witness. He
has therefore forfeited his right to remain free. [960 G-H
961 A)
3.Section 439(2) of the Code of Criminal Procedure
confers jurisdiction on the High Court or Court of Sessions
to direct that any person who has between released on bail
under Chapter XXXIII be arrested and committed to custody.
The power to take back in custody an accused who has been
enlarged on bail has to be exercised with care and
circumspection. But the power, though of an extra-ordinary
nature, is meant to be exercised in appropriate cases when,
by a preponderance of probabilities, it is clear that the
accused is interfering with the course of justice by
tampering with witnesses. Refusal to exercise that wholesome
power in such cases, few though they may be, will reduce it
to a dead letter and will suffer the courts to be silent
spectators to the subversion of the judicial process. [961
A-C]
Madhukar Purshottam Mondakal v. Talab Haji Hussain 60,
Bombay Law Reporter 465 and Gurcharan Singh & Ors. v. State
(Delhi Administration), 1978 Criminal Law journal, 129, 137;
Principles in, applied.
4.Rejection of bail when bail is applied for is one
thing; cancellation of bail already granted is quite
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another. It is easier to reject a bail application in a
non-bailable case than to cancel a bail granted in such a
case. Cancellation of bail necessarily involves the review
of a decision already made and can by and large be permitted
only if, by reason of supervening circumstances, it would be
no longer conducive to a fair trial to allow the accused to
retain his freedom during the trial. The fact that
prosecution witnesses have turned hostile cannot by itself
justify the inference that the accused has won them over.
The objective fact that witnesses have turned hostile must
be shown to bear a causal connection with the subjective
involvement therein of the respondent. Without such proof,
a bail once granted cannot be cancelled on the off chance or
on the supposition that witnesses have been won over by the
accused. Inconsistent testimony can no more be ascribed by
itself to the influence of the accused than consistent
testimony, by itself, can be ascribed to the pressure of the
prosecution. It is therefore necessary for the prosecution
to show some act or conduct on the part of the respondent
from which a reasonable inference may arise that the
witnesses have gone back on their statements as a result of
an intervention by or on behalf of the respondent. [957 AF]
5.It is not necessary for the prosecution to prove by a
mathematical certainty or even beyond a reasonable doubt
that the witnesses have turned hostile because they are won
over by the accused. The issue of cancellation of bail can
only arise in criminal cases, but that does not mean that
every incidental matter in a criminal case must be proved
beyond a reasonable doubt like the guilt of the accused.
Indeed, proof of facts by preponderance
952
of probabilities as in a civil case is not foreign to
criminal jurisprudence because, in cases where the statute
raises a presumption of guilt as, for, example, the
Prevention of Corruption Act, the accused is entitled to
rebut that presumption by proving his defence by a balance
of probabilities. He does not have to establish his case
beyond a reasonable doubt. The same standard of proof as in
a civil case applies to proof of incidental issues involved
in a criminal trial like the cancellation of bail of an
accused. The prosecution, therefore, can establish its case
in an application for cancellation of bail by showing on a
preponderance of probabilities that the accused has
attempted to tamper or has tampered with its witnesses.
Proving by the test of balance of probabilities that the
accused has abused his liberty or that there is a
reasonable apprehension that he will interfere with the
course of justice is all that is necessary for the
prosecution to do in order to succeed in an application for
cancellation of bail. [957 G-H, 958 A-D]
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeal No. 188 of
1978.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order dated
the 11th April, 1978 of the Delhi High Court in Criminal
Misc. Application No. 130 of 1978.
Ram Jethmalani, and R. N. Sachthey for the Appellant.
A.N. Mulla, D. Mathur, B. R. Handa and D. Goburdhan for
Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
CHANDRACHUD, C.J.-The respondent is arraigned as accused No.
2 in a prosecution instituted by the Central Bureau of
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Investigation in the Court of the learned Chief Metropolitan
Magistrate Delhi. Omitting details which are not necessary
for the present purpose the case of the prosecution is as
follows :
One Shri Amrit Nahata had produced a film called ’Kissa
Kursi Ka’, which portrayed the story of the political doings
of the respondent and his mother, Smt. Indira Gandhi, the
former Prime Minister of India. The Board of Censors
declined to grant a certificate for exhibition of the film
whereupon, Shri Nahata filed a writ petition in this Court
for a Writ of Mandamus. On October 29, 1975, a direction
was given by the Court that the film be screened on November
17 to enable the Judges to see whether the censorship
certificate was refused rightly. In order to prevent this
Court from exercising its constitutional jurisdiction and
with a view to preventing the film from being publicly
exhibited, the respondent and his co-accused Shri Vidya
Charan Shukla, who was then the Minister for Information and
Broadcasting, entered into a conspiracy to take possession
of the film and to destroy it. In pursuance of that
conspiracy, 13 steel trunks containing 150 spools of the
film were brought under special escort from Bombay to Delhi
at the behest of Shri. Shukla. The consignment reached the
New Delhi Railway Station on November 10, 1975. The spools
were then loaded in two tempo vehicles belonging to the res-
pondent or to his company, M/s. Maruti Ltd., Gurgaon, of
which respondent was the Managing Director. The vehicles,
which were driven by Ram Chander and Charan Singh were taken
to Gurgaon at
953
the premises of Maruti Limited where, under instructions
given by the respondent, the spools were destroyed by
setting fire to them some time prior to November 24, 1975.
A positive print of the film was lying in the Auditorium of
the Ministry at Mahadev Road, New Delhi, which was taken
charge of by one Ghose, a Deputy Secretary in the Ministry
of Information and Broadcasting. The loaded it in Shri
Shukla’s staff car whereupon Shri Shukla himself delivered
the print at No. 1, Safdarjang Road, where the respondent
and his mother used to live at the relevant time. The
Supreme Court was informed that it was not possible to
screen the film for evaluation by the Judges. And the writ
petition filed by Shri Nahata came to an abrupt end upon an
affidavit being filed on March 22, 1976, by Chose that the
spools of the film had got mixed up with some other films
received by the Government in connection with the
International Film Festival.
After the emergency was lifted and the present Janata
Government came into power, a certain information was
received in consequence of which a raid was effected on the
Gurgaon premises of the Maruti Limited. The raid yielded
incriminating material to show that the 13 boxes which had
been received from Bombay at the New Delhi Railway Station
contained the spools of the film ’Kissa Kursi Ka’ which were
burnt and destroyed in the factory premises. R. B. Khedkar.
a Security Officer of the Maruti Limited and his assistant,
Kanwar Singh Yadav, who was the Security Supervisor of the
company, were arrested on the very day of the raid. Yadav
made a statement on the following day stating how the film
was burnt in the premises of the factory. Yadav’s
confessional statement was recorded by the Chief
Metropolitan Magistrate on June 3 and Khedkar’s on June 4.
They were granted pardon under section 306 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure on July 14, 1977. During the course of
investigation, various statements were recorded by the-
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police including those of the two drivers of the tempo
vehicles, Ram Chander and Charan Singh, a watchman called Om
Prakash and several employees of the Store Department of the
company.
After completion of the investigation, a chargesheet was
filed by the C.B.I. in the Court of the Chief Metropolitan
Magistrate citing 138 witnesses for proving charges under
section 120B read with sections 409, 435 and 201 of the
Penal Code as also for substantive offences under the last
mentioned three sections of the Penal Code.
In certain proceedings for contempt and perjury which were
filed in this Court against Shri Shukla, it was directed by
the Court on January 2, 1978, that the Chief Metropolitan
’Magistfate shall commence the hearingof the case on
February 15 and that the Sessions Court will co the trial
on March 20, 1978, and shall proceed with the hearingfrom
day to day. By an order dated February/March 14, the Court
extended the time limit by four days in each case.
The committal proceedings commenced in the Court of the
learned Chief Metropolitan Magistrate, Delhi on February 20,
1978. Khedkar who was examined on that day supported the
procecution fully except
10 329 SCI/178
954
that he admitted in his cross-examination that he had
written two inland letters, which may tend to throw a cloud
on his evidence. On February 21, the second approver Yadav
was examined by the prosecution. He resiled both from the
statement which he made to the policeunder section 161 of
the Code of Criminal Procedure as well as fromhis
judicial confession. The recording of Yadav’s evidence was
over on the 22nd.
On February 27, 1978, an application was filed by the Delhi
Administration, in the High Court of Delhi for cancellation
of the respondent’s bail. That application having been
dismissed by a learned single Judge on April 11, 1978, the
Administration has filed this appeal by special leave.
Before the High Court, the following submissions were made
on behalf of the appellant
(1)That the respondent was charged with offences amongst
which is the offence under section 409 of the Penal Code
which is punishable imprisonment for life. The respondent,
having been accused of a non-bailable offence, it was wrong
in the first instance to enlarge him on bail.
(2)initially, the investigation was started in respect of
the conspiracy and theft of the Mm from the custody of the
Government. The respondent had obtained an order of
anticipatory bail from the Delhi High, Court in respect of
those offences. It transpired during the course of
investigation that a far more serious offence under section
120B read with section 409 of the Penal Code was committed
by the respondent and the co-accused. Even though prior to
July 14, 1977, on which date the chargesheet was filed, the
State was in possession of information showing that the
respondent was trying to tamper with the witnesses, the
State did not apply for cancellation of the anticipatory
bail nor did it ask the Magistrate to issue a non-bailable
warrant because the very witnesses who were attempted to be
tampered with had complained to the police that the
respondent was trying to win them over. In the larger
interest of justice, the State did not adopt a vindictive
attitude towards the respondent by asking that he should be
taken into custody;
(3)It was the duty of the High Court to enforce the pro-
visionsof section 437 of the Code of Criminal Procedure
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when it was broughtto its notice that the respondent, being
charged with an offence under section 409 which is
punishable with life imprisonment was illegally oil bail,
particularly when he had misused his liberty. The
obligation of the Court to enforce the provisions of section
437 of the Code of Criminal Procedure does not depend upon
whether the State has acted with vigilance and promptitude.
(4) The burden which rests on the State in ’an application
for cancellation of bail is of a limited nature. All that
is necessary for the State to show, in support I of its plea
that bail be cancelled, is that there is a reasonable
apprehension that by tampering with witnesses,
95 5
the accused is interfering with the course of justice.
It’is neither necessary to prove the fact of tampering with
mathematical certainty nor indeed beyond a reasonable doubt.
The test to be adopted in such matters is one of ’reasonable
apprehension’.
(5)On February 13 and 14, 1978, approver Yadav, first
through Khedkar and then by an application written and
signed by himself, complained to the C.B.I. Officers that
the respondent was trying to tamper with his evidence
through Ram Chander, the driver of the tempo. Within a week
thereafter, that is on February 21, 1978, Yadav turned
hostile by going back upon the statement which he had made
before the police under section 161 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure and on his confessional statement recorded by the
Magistrate on the basis of which he had secured pardon a few
days earlier. This incident by itself was sufficient to
justify the State’s plea that there was a reasonable
apprehension in the mind of the prosecution that the
respondent was tampering with their witnesses. ,
(6)The fact that the respondent had contacted Yadav on
February 17 and was seen in Yadav’s company on that date was
supported by the evidence of Ganpat Singh, a Postal Peon,
Digamber Das, an employee of the Maruti Limited and Satpal
Singh, a constable of the Haryana Armed Police. There was
no justification for disbelieving the affidavits of these
three persons.
(7)As far back as July 1977, the respondent had attempted to
tamper with two witnesses, Charan Singh and A. K. Dangwal.
Both of these witnesses had given written applications to
the police complaining of attempts made by the respondent to
win them over. The entries made by the police in the
General Diary corroborated the complaints made by these
witnesses. The two complaints, though not acted upon
promptly by the police by asking for the cancellation of
respondent’s bail, render it highly probable that during the
later stages of the trial several witnesses turned hostile
on account of the pressure and influence which the
respondent exercised on them.
(8)It was through Ram Chander that approver Yadav was ap-
proached and tampered with. On February 21, 1978, Ram
Chander was sitting in the Court though his presence, was
not necessary and indeed, he entered the court-room along
with a group of respondent’s partisans for whom the
respondent had obtained the Magistrates permission by seeing
him in his chamber.
(9)These very contentions have been repeated before us by
Shri Ram Jethamalani who also relied upon some additional
data in support of the application for cancellation of the
respondent’s bail. The new material on which counsel relies
has come into existence after the High Court delivered its
judgment on April 1.1 and in the very nature of things, the
High Court has had no opportunity to consider its weight and
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relevance on the question in issue.
Shri A. N. Mulla who appears on behalf of the respondent
controverted each and every allegation made by the
appellant. He contends that the prosecution has been,
launched out of political vendetta, that ,ordinary offences
triable by a Magistrate have been magnified beyond
956
all proportion, that pardon was tendered to the so-called
approvers though no charge could have been levelled against
them, for the sole purpose of attracting the application of
section 306(5) of the Criminal Procedure Code so as to drag
the accused to the Sessions Court, that the police with
their unlimited resources have left no stone unturned in
order somehow to implicate the accused and that evidence in
regard to tampering of witnesses is manufactured with a view
to explaning away the tell-tale circumstance that the key
witnesses, including one of the approvers, have refused to
support the prosecution. The prosecution, according to
counsel, ventured into sensation-mongenng by building the
super-structure of a Sessions trial on a slip foundation and
having been disillusioned by the performance of its star
witnesses, it has resorted to the expedient of asking for
cancellation of the respondent’s bail in order to give prop
to a failing can based on trumped-up charges. Strong
objection was taken by the learned counsel to the attempt
made by the appellant to cite new and additional material
before us. This, according to him is impermissible in an
appeal filed by leave under article 136 of the Constitution,
since the only question that is open to us to consider is
whether, on the, material before it, the High Court is right
in coming to the conclusion to which it did-
We are not disposed to allow the State to rely on any new
material which was not available to the High Court. true,
that the additional data came into existence after the High
Court gave its judgment but it would be unfair to the
respondent to make use of that material without giving him
an adequate opportunity to meet it. That will entail a
fairly long adjournment which may frustrate the very object
of the proceedings initiated by the State. Besides, though
in appropriate cases the court has the power to take
additional evidence, that power has to be exercised
sparingly, particularly in appeals brought under article 136
of the Constitution. The High Court, while dismissing the
State’s application for cancellation of bail, has reserved
to it the liberty to approach it "if, at any time in future,
the respondent abuse& his liberty". The new developments
could, if the prosecution is so advised,be brought to
the High Court’s attention for obtaining suitable relief.
We cannot spend our time in scanning affidavits and sifting
materialfor the first time for ourselves, for determining
whether the new material can justify cancellation of bail.
We propose, therefore, to limit ourselves to the facts and
incidents which were before the High Court and on which it
has pronounced.
We ought not to forget, while dealing with the rival
contentions, that the trial is still pending in the Sessions
Court and any observation made by us in this incidental
proceeding may unwittingly influence the course of trial.
We will take care to see that nothing is said on the merits
of the matter, no comment made on the veracity of witnesses
and no subtle guidance offered to unravel why the witnesses
have turned hostile. These matters, at this moment, are
within the exclusive domain of the Sessions Court and we
cannot, by employing an artifice, withdraw the decision of
these questions to ourselves. It is the privilege of the
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Sessions Court, not of- the Supreme Court, to try the
957
accused. We must therefore make it clear that nothing said
by us in our judgment shall influence the decision of the
case and the Sessions Judge is free to assess and evaluate
the evidence, unhampered by any observations we may have
happened to make.
Rejection of bail when bail is applied for is one thing;
cancellation of bail already granted is quite another. It
is easier to reject a bail application in a non-bailable
case than to cancel a bail granted in such a case.
Cancellation of bail necessarily involves the review of a
decision already made and can by and large be permitted only
if, by reason of supervening circumstances, it would be no
longer conducive to a fair trial to allow the accused to
retain his freedom during the trial. The fact that
prosecution witnesses have turned hostile cannot by itself
justify the inference that the accused has won them
over.brother,a sister or a parent who has seen the
commission of crime, may resile in the Court from a
statement recorded during the course of investigation. That
happens instinctively, out of natural love and affection,
not out of persuasion by the accused. The witness has a
stake in the innocence of the accused and tries therefore to
save him from the guilt. Likewise, an employee may, out of
a sense of gratitude-, oblige the employer by uttering an
untruth without pressure or persuasion. In other words, the
objective fact that witnesses have turned hostile must be
shown to bear a causal connection with the subjective
involvement therein of the respondent. Without such proof,
a bail once granted cannot be cancelled on the off chance or
on the supposition that witnesses have been won over by the
accused. Inconsistent testimony can no more be ascribed by
itself to the influence of the accused than consistent
testimony, by itself, can be ascribed to the pressure of the
prosecution. Therefore, Mr. Mulla is right that one has to
countenance a reasonable possibility that the employees of
Maruti like the approver Yadav might have, of their own
volition, attemptedto protect the respondent from
involvement in criminal charges. Their willingness now to
oblige the respondent would depend uponlow
much the respondent has obliged them in the past.It is
therefore necessary for the prosecution to show some act or
conduct on the part of the respondent from which a
reasonable inference may arise that the witnesses have gone
back on their statements as a result of an intervention by
or on behalf of the respondent.
Before we go to the facts of the case, it is necessary to
consider what precisely is the nature of the burden which
rests on the prosecution in an application for cancellation
of bail. Is it necessary for the prosecution to prove by a
mathematical certainty or even beyond a reasonable doubt
that the witnesses have turned hostile because the, are won
over by the accused ? We think not. The issue of cancella-
tion of bail can only arise in criminal cases, but that does
not mean that every incidental matter in a criminal case
must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt like the guilt of
the accused. Whether an accused is absconding and therefore
his property can be attached under section 83 of the
Criminal Procedure Code, whether a search of person of
premises was taken as required by the provisions of section
100 of the Code, whether a confession is recorded in strict
accordance with
958
the requirements of section 164 of the Code and whether a
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fact was discovered in consequence of information received
from an accused as required by section 27 of the Evidence
Act are all matters which fall peculiarly within the
ordinary sweep of criminal trials. But though the guilt of
the accused in cases which involve the assessment of these
facts has to be established beyond a reasonable doubt, these
various facts are not required to be proved by the same
rigorous standard. Indeed, proof of facts by preponderance
of probabilities as: in a civil case is not foreign to
criminal jurisprudence because, in cases where the statute
raises a presumption of guilt as, for example, the
Prevention of Corruption Act, the accused is entitled to
rebut that presumption by proving his defence by a balance
of probabilities. He does not have to establish his case
beyond a reasonable doubt. The same standard of proof as in
a civil case applies to proof of incidental issues involved
in a criminal trial like the cancellation of bail of an
accused. The prosecution, therefore, can establish its case
in an application for cancellation of bail by showing on a
preponderance of probabilities that the accused has
attempted to tamper or has tampered with its witnesses.
Proving by the test of balance of probabilities that the
accused has abused his liberty or that there is a reasonable
apprehension that he will interfere with the course of
justice is all that is necessary for the prosecution to do
in order to succeed in an application for cancellation of
bail.
Our task therefore is to determine whether, by the
application of the test of probabilities, the prosecution
has succeeded in proving its case that the respondent has
tampered with its witnesses and that there is a reasonable
apprehension that he will continue to indulge irk that
course of conduct if he is allowed to remain at large.
Normally, the High Court’s findings are treated by this
Court as binding on such issues, but, regretfully, we have
to depart from that rule since the High Court has rejected
incontrovertible evidence on hypertechnical considerations.
if two views of the evidence were reasonably possible and
the High Court had taken one view, we would have been dis-
inclined to interfere therewith in this appeal under article
1.36 of the Constitution. But the evidence points in one
direction only, leaving no manner of doubt that the
respondent has misused the facility afforded to him by the
High Court by granting anticipatory bail to him.
The sequence of events is too striking to fail to catch the
watchful eye. But, we will not enter too minutely.into the
several incidents on which the appellant relies to prove its
case. We will confine ourselves to some of the outstanding
instances and show how the prosecution is justified in its
apprehension.
Kanwar Singh Yadav was working at the relevant time as a
Security Supervisor under R. B. Khedkar who was the Security
officer of Maruti Ltd. Both of them were arrested an the
very day of the raid, that is, on May 25, 1977. On the
26th, the police recorded Yadav’s statement and on the 28th,
he made a petition to the Chief Metropolitan Magistrate,
expressing his willingness to confess.
959
The confessional statement was recorded on June 3 and Yadav
was granted pardon on July 14, under section 306 of the Code
of Criminal Procedure. Khedkar made a confession on June 4
and was granted pardon on July 14, 1977. The C.B.I. filed
the chargesheet on 14th July itself.
The committal proceedings were fixed by this Court by an
order dated January 2, 1978 to begin peremptorily on
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February 15, 1978. The respondent obtained a modification
of that order, by virtue of which the proceedings began on
February 20.
One day before the proceedings were originally scheduled to
begin, that is on 14th February, the two approvers. Yadav
and Khedkar appeared at the C.B.I. office and filed written
complaints dated the 13th that the respondent was making
repeated attempts to call Yadav to meet him by sending the
car with Ram Chander, the driver of the respondent. One of
these complaints is signed by Yadav and the other by
Khedkar. Yadav turned hostile when he was examined on the
21st February before the Committing Magistrate. He went
back on his police statement, resiled from his confession
and risked his pardon. But he admitted in his cross-
examination to the Public Prosecutor that he had given the
complaint to the C.B.I. He explained it away by offering a
series of excuses but we will only characterise that attempt
as lame and unconvincing. A deeper probe into the matter
and its critical analysis is likely to exceed the legitimate
bounds of this proceeding and therefore we will stop with
the observation that there is more than satisfactory proof
of the respondent having attempted to suborn Yadav. Whether
Yadav succumbed to the persuasion is not for us to say. The
Sessions Judge shall have to decide that question
uninfluenced by anything appearing herein. We are
concerned with the respondent’s conduct, not with Yadav’s
reaction or his motives. Khedkar stuck to the
complaint.
That is in regard to the event of the 14th February. On the
17th ’ Yadav and the respondent were seen together, the
former leaving,, the Maruti factory with the respondent in
his car. This is supported by the affidavits of Sat Pal
Singh, a constable of the Haryana Armed Constabulary who was
on duty at the Factory, Ganpat Singh, a Postal Peon and
Digambar Das, an Assistant Despatch Clerk in Maruti. It is
undisputed that the respondent had gone for official work to
the factory on the 17th. The High Court objects the inci-
dent firstly because it is not mentioned in the petition for
cancellation of the respondent’s bail. The affidavit of Ved
Prakash, Inspector of Police, C.B.I., shows that information
of the incident was received on the 24th whereas the
petition was drafted on the 22nd February. That apart, we
cannot understand the High Court to say that the affidavits
of the three witnesses could not be accepted because the
verification clause of the affidavits was "most defective"
as it could not be said "what part of the affidavit is true
to the knowledge of the deponent and what part thereof is
true to the belief of the deponent". This reason has been
cited by the learned Judge for rejecting many an incident
but then it was open to him to ask for better particulars of
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verification. The witnesses claim to have seen with their
own eyes that Yadav drove away with the respondent.
The incident consisted of one single event and there was no
possibility of the witnesses’ knowledge being mixed up with
their belief. We find it impossible. to endorse this part
of the High Court’s reasoning and are inclined to the view
that the respondent ultimately succeeded in establishing
contact with Yadav. Whether the respondent succeeded in
achieving his ’ultimate object is beyond us to, say except
that Yadav turned hostile in the Committing Magistrate’s
court on February 21.
The High Court has also rejected the affidavit of Sarup
Singh that on February 28, 1978, while he was doing duty as
an armed. constable at the factory, he saw the respondent
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coming to the factory and heard him assuring Yadav that he
need not worry. The verification clause of the affidavit
was again thought to be ’defective". We are unable to agree
with this part of the learned Judge’s judgment for reasons
already indicated.
We are also unable to agree with the High Court that the
complaint filed by Charan Singh on July 12 in regard to the
incident of July 5, 1977 and the complaint filed by A. K.
Dangwal on July 9 in regard to the incident of July 7, 1977
are "irrelevant" since the prosecution did not even oppose
the grant of bail to the respondent after the chargesheet
was filed on July 14, 1977. It is true that it is not
possible to accept Shri Jethmalani’s explanation of the
inactivity on the part of the prosecution even after
receiving the two complaints showing that the respondent was
trying to tamper with the witnesses. Concessions of
benevolence cannot readily be made in favour of the prose-
cution. But it cannot be overlooked that Charan Singh did
turn hostile, though that happened after the, High Court
gave its judgment on April 1 1. The respondent knows that
the witness turned hostile and significantly, though the
witness refused to support the prosecution he made an
important admission that he bad submitted a written applica-
tion or complaint to Inspector Ved Prakash on July 12, 1977
and that "whatever is mentioned in that application is
correct". That application which is really a complaint,
contains the most flagrant allegation of attempted tampering
with the witness by the respondent, through his driver
Chattar Singh. Reference to this incident is not in the
nature of Additional evidence properly so called because the
witness was examined in the Sessions Court in the presence
of the respondent and his advocates. They know what the
witness stated in his open evidence and what explanation he
gave for making. the complaint on July 12, 1977. The
Sessions Court will no doubt assess its value but for our
limited purpose, the episode is difficult to dismiss as
irrelevant.
Even excluding the last incident in regard to Charan Singh
which is really first in point of time and though it is
corroborated by an entry in the General Diary, we are of the
opinion that (i) Yadav’s complaint of the, 14th February,
(ii) Khedkar’s complaint of even date, (iii) Yadav’s
admission in his evidence that he did make the written
complaint inspite of the fact that he had turned hostile
(iv) the affidavits of Sat Pal Singh, Ganpat Singh and
Digambar Das in regard to the incident of the 17th and (v)
the affidavit of Sarup Singh
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regarding the incident of February 28, furnish satisfactory
proof that the respondent has abused his liberty by
attempting to, suborn the prosecution witnesses. He has
therefore forfeited his right to remain free.
Section 439(2) of the Code of Criminal Procedure confers
jurisdictionon the High Court or Court of Sessions to
direct that any person whohas been released on bail
under Chapter XXXIII be arrested and committed to custody.
The power to take back in custody an accused who has been
enlarged on bail has to be exercised with care and
circumspection. But the power, though of an extra-ordinary
nature, is meant to be exercised in appropriate cases when,
by a preponderance of probabilities, it is clear that the
accused is interfering with the course of justice by
tampering with witnesses. Refusal to exercise that
wholesome power in such cases, few though they may be, will
reduce it to a dead letter and will suffer the Courts to be
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silent spectators to the subversion of the judicial process.
We might as well wind up the Courts and bolt their doors
against all than. permit a few to ensure that justice shall
not be done.
The power to cancel bail was exercised by the Bombay High
Court in Madhukar Purshottam Jondkar v. Talab Haji
Hussain(1) where the accused was charged with a bailable
offence. The test adopted by that Court was whether the
material placed before the Court was "such as to lead to the
conclusion that there is a strong prima facie case that if
the accused were to be allowed to be at large he would
tamper with the prosecution witnesses and impede the course
of justice". An appeal preferred by the accused against the
judgment of the Bombay High Court was dismissed by this
Court. In Gurcharan Singh and others v. State (Delhi
Administration,(2) while confirming the order of the High
Court cancelling the bail of the accused, this Court
observed that the only question which the Court had to
consider at that stage was whether "there was prima facie
case made out, as alleged, on the statements of the
witnesses and on other materials", that "there was a
likelihood of the appellants tampering with the prosecution
witnesses". It is by the application of this test that we
have come to the conclusion that the respondent’s bail ought
to be cancelled.
But avoidance of undue hardship or harassment is the quint-
essence of judicial process. Justice, at all time and in
all situations, has to be tempered by mercy, even as against
persons who attempt to tamper with its processes. The
apprehension of the prosecution is that ’Maruti witnesses’
are likely to be won over. The instances discussed by us
are also confined to the attempted tampering of Maruti
witnesses like Yadav and Charan Singh, though we have
excluded Charan Singh’s complaint from our consideration.
Since the appellant’s counsel has assured us that the
prosecution will examine the Maruti witnesses immediately
and that their evidence will occupy no
(1) 60 Bombay Law Reporter 465.
(2) 1978 Criminal Law Journal 129. 137.
962
more than a month, it will be enough to limit the
cancellation of respondent’s bail to that period. We hope
and trust that no unfair advantage will be taken of our
order by stalling the proceedings or, by asking for a stay
on some pretext or the other. If that is done, the arms of
law shall be long enough. Out of abundant caution, we
reserve liberty to the State to apply to the High Court, if
necessary, but only if strictly necessary. We are hopeful
that the State too will take our order in its true spirit.
In the result, we allow the appeal partly, set aside the
judgment of the High Court dated April 1 1, cancel the
respondents bail for a period of one month from to-day and
direct that he be. taken into custody. Respondent will, in
the normal course, be entitled to be released on fresh bail
on the expiry of the aforesaid period. The learned Sessions
Judge will be at liberty to fix the amount and conditions of
bail. The order of anticipatory bail will stand modified to
the extent indicated herein.
S. R. Appeal allowed in part.
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