Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 4
CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 1172 of 2006
PETITIONER:
Rajesh Ranjan Yadav @ Pappu Yadav
RESPONDENT:
CBI through its Director
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 30/11/2007
BENCH:
S.B.SINHA & HARJIT SINGH BEDI
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
O R D E R
CRL.M.P. NO. 9066 and 11845 OF 2007
IN
CRIMINAL APPEAL NO. 1172 OF 2006
HARJIT SINGH BEDI, J.
1. This application for bail has been filed directly in
this court on the following grounds:
1) that the appellant has been in custody for more
than seven years and that his conduct in jail has
been exemplary;
2) that on account of the death of his father, there
is nobody available to him to pursue the present
case,
3) that no inculpatory evidence has come on
record justifying his continued incarceration,
4) despite the orders of this Court from time to
time, the trial was no where near completion and,
finally,
5) that his medical condition required sophisticated
life saving treatment which was only possible
outside jail.
2. We are of the opinion that in the light of the facts
that several bail applications filed by the appellant
raising almost similar issues have been rejected no case
for release on bail is made out. We are also of the
opinion that the demise of the appellant’s father also does
not ipso facto mean that he should be released on bail more
particularly on account of the serious charges against him.
We are therefore left with the last two points for
consideration.
3. Mr. Rakesh Kumar Singh, the learned counsel for the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 4
appellant has very strenuously urged that despite the
directions of this Court in Rajesh Ranjan Yadav @ Pappu
Yadav vs. CBI through its Director (2007) 1 SCC 70 while
dismissing one of the bail applications filed by the
appellant that the trial court was to ensure that the
defence witnesses were examined on a day-to-day basis in
accordance with a fixed time schedule so that the trial was
completed as expeditiously as possible and the judgment
delivered, the defence evidence had so far not been
completed on account of the delaying tactics on the part of
the CBI and it was therefore appropriate that the appellant
be released on bail. It has also been pointed out that a
direction had also been issued that as the appellant was
lodged in Tihar Jail in Delhi and the trial was being
conducted in Patna, video conference facilities be provided
to the appellant in order to enable him oversee the
proceedings in the trial but the said facilities were not
being made available to him as the equipment had been
damaged. It has also been argued that as the appellant was
grossly overweight, he was required to undergo some
invasive surgical process which required special care and
nursing which could not be made available while the
appellant remained in custody. Several documents in
support of the appellant’s medical condition have been
handed over to us in Court.
4. In reply a counter affidavit on behalf of the CBI has
been filed and Mr. A. Sharan, learned ASG has drawn our
attention to the enclosures appended therewith to submit
that the delay, if any, in the completion of the trial was
on account of repeated applications filed by the appellant
in the trial court asking for one or other information or
the recall of witnesses and as such it did not lie in him
to state that the trial was being inordinately delayed. He
has also pointed out that the CBI had completed its
evidence on 7.6.2006 and that a list of 43 defence
witnesses had been given by the appellant of whom only a
few had been examined and the case had been adjourned time
and again at the instance of the accused or to secure the
presence of the remaining defence witnesses. He has also
submitted that in the light of Sections 273 and 317 of
Cr.P.C the trial could go on even if an accused was not
personally present and as such directions should be given
by this court that notwithstanding the fact that the video
conference facility was out of order the court should go
ahead and complete the trial. He has also pleaded that
the appellant had been referred to arguably the best
medical facility in Delhi i.e. All India Institute of
Medical Sciences (AIIMS) and that all medical aid would be
provided to him as per his needs.
5. We have heard learned counsel for the parties and
gone through the record very carefully. In the cited case
it has been observed that the appellant had filed bail
applications ad nauseam in the High Court and in this Court
and this amounted to a misuse of the legal process and it
had accordingly been ordered that no further bail
application on his behalf be entertained by any Court. An
application for review was thereafter filed in the
aforesaid matter and was allowed on 27.4.2007 only to the
extent that "in the event any occasion arises, the
petitioner may move this Court for grant of bail". The
present application filed within a month of that date, is
yet another in continuation of the series of applications
raising almost identical issues which have already been
rejected by this Court. However, as some additional points
have been raised, we must deal with them as well. It is
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 4
clear from the orders that have been put on record and the
additional counter affidavit on behalf of the CBI sworn by
Sh. Pyare Lal Meena, Additional Superintendent of Police
CBI, that the defence evidence had not been completed
because the defence had often sought adjournments or the
defence witnesses had not been present. We find from a
perusal of the Zimni orders of the trial court from
2.5.2007 to 20.9.2007 that the defence has been
procrastinating in the matter and not permitting the
defence evidence to proceed to its conclusion. It is true
that on a few occasions the trial had been adjourned on
account of the non-availability of the video conference
facility whereas the record reveals that the adjournments
had largely been sought either by the co-accused Anil Kumar
Yadav or the appellant, on one pretext or the other. It is
also clear that several miscellaneous applications have
been filed by the appellant praying for a recall of
witnesses and as they have been rejected the matters are in
the High Court by way of appeal/revision.
6. Mr. Rakesh Kumar Singh, the learned counsel for the
appellant has however submitted that the appellant was only
exercising his legal rights in accordance with law and
could therefore not be faulted on that account. We agree
with the learned counsel to the extent that the appellant
was fully justified in exercising his legal rights but it
does not then behove him to say that the trial was being
unduly delayed. On the other hand, as has already been
noted above, adjournments have been taken time and again
for the completion of the defence evidence whereas Mr.
Sharan has, on the contrary, made a statement that the CBI
would complete its arguments within a week of the
commencement thereof.
7. We have also carefully gone through the appellant’s
medical papers that have been produced before us in court.
We are of the opinion that they do not as of now justify
his release on bail even on medical grounds the more so as
all facilities are being made available to him by the jail
authorities. We accordingly dismiss the application but
while doing so issue the following directions:
1) Every effort will be made to provide
Video Conference Facilities to the
appellant but in the light of Sections
273 and 317 of the Cr.P.C , the trial
will go on to its conclusion even if
they are not available;
2) that in the event that the video
conference facilities are available, the
appellant would be allowed access to his
lawyers through the aforesaid facility
in addition for one hour on each day
that the final arguments in the trial
proceed.
3) that the Tihar jail authorities will
ensure that all the directions issued by
the attending doctors with respect to
the appellant will be observed
scrupulously ; and
(4) should the appellant’s medical
condition require further orders from
the Courts at a later stage, he would be
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 4
at liberty to approach this Court yet
again.