Babu Singh Ors Vs. The State of U.P [1978] INSC 18 (31 January 1978)
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
DESAI, D.A.
CITATION: 1978 AIR 527 1978 SCR (2) 777 1978
SCC (1) 579
ACT:
Bail--Grant of bail--Practice and Procedure
in the matter of granting of bail to an accused Person pending the hearing of
an appeal--Criteria for bail--Order XLVII Rule 6 r/w Order XXI Rules 6 and 27
of Supreme Court Rules, 1966--Courts are not barred from second consideration
at a later stage by entertaining another application for bail--Effect of
interim directions by the Court.
HEADNOTE:
All the petitioners were charged with the
offence of murder u/s 302 I.P.C., but all of them were acquitted by the
Sections Judge on 4-11-1972. The State successfully appealed against the
acquittal and by its judgment dated 20-5-1977 the High Court, while reversing
the findings of the Sessions Court, held all of them guilty and sentenced them
all to life imprisonment. The petitioners came up to the Supreme Court
exercising their statutory right of appeal. Pending the disposal of the appeal,
they moved an application for bail which was rejected on 7-9-1977. The
petitioners moved another application for bail.
Granting the bail, subject to fulfillment of
conditions imposed, the Court
HELD : 1. An order refusing an application
for bail does not necessarily preclude another, on a later occasion, giving
more materials, further developments and different considerations. While it is
a circumstance which the Courts surely must set store, Courts are not barred
from second consideration at a later stage. An interim direction is not a
conclusive adjudication and updated reconsideration is not overturning an
earlier negation. [779 D-E]
2. The significance and sweep of Art. 21 make
the deprivation of liberty ephemeral or enduring, a matter of grave concern and
permissible only when the law authorising it is reasonable, even handed and
geared to the goals of community good and State-necessity spelt out In Article
19.
Reasonableness postulates intelligent care
and predicates that deprivation of freedom by refusal of bail is not for
punitive purpose, but for the bifocal interests of justice to the individual
involved and society affected. [784 E-F]
3. Personal liberty deprived when bail is
refused, is too precious a value of ourconstitutional system recognised under
Art. 21, that the curial power to negateit is a great trust exercisable, not
casually, but judicially with lively concern for the cost to the individual and
the community. Personal liberty of an accused or convict is fundamental,
suffering lawful eclipse only in terms of procedure established by law. The
last four words of Art.
21 are the life of that human right. [781
A-B]
4. All deprivation of liberty is validated by
social defence and individual correction along an anti-criminal direction.
Public justice is central to the whole scheme
of bail law.
Feeling justice must be forbidden but
punitive harshness should be minimised. Restorative devises to redeem the man,
even through community service, meditative drill, study classes or other
resources should be innovated and playing foul with public peace by tampering
with evidence, intimidating witnesses or committing offences while on
judicially sanctioned "free enterprise" should be provided against.
No seeker of justice shall play confidence tricks on the Court or community.
Conditions may be hung around bail orders, not to cripple but to protect. Such
is the holistic jurisdiction and humanistic orientation invoked by the judicial
discretion correlated to the values of our Constitution. [785 B-C]
5. The principal rule to guide release on
bail should be to secure the presence of the applicant, who seeks to be
liberated, to take judgment and serve sentence in the event of the Court
punishing him with imprisonment. In this 778 perspective relevance of
considerations is regulated by their nexus with the likely absence of the
applicant for fear of a severe sentence. [783 E] The vital considerations are:
(a) The nature of charge, the nature of the evidence and, the punishment to
which the party may be liable, if convicted, or conviction is confirmed. When
the crime charged is of the highest magni- tude and the punishment of it
assigned by law is of extreme severity, the Court may reasonably presume, some
evidence warranting, that no amount of bail would secure the presence of the
convict at the stage of judgment, should he be enlarged (b) whether the course
of justices would be thwarted by him who seeks the benignant jurisdiction of
the Court to be freed for the time being (c) Antecedents of the man and
socio-geographical circumstance, and whether or the petitioner's record shows
him to be 'a habitual offender, (d) When, a person charged with a grave offence
has been acquitted at a stage, the intermediate acquittal has pertinence to a
bail plea when the appeal before this Court pends. The grounds for denial of
provisional releases becomes weaker when a fair finding of innocence has been
recorded by one court, (e) Whether the accused's safety may be. more. in,
prison, than in the, vengeful village where feuds have provoked the violent
offence and (f) The period in. prison already spent and the prospect of delay
in the appeal being heard, and disposed of.
[783 A-B,F, 784 C, D, 785 D-E, 786,A]
Kashmira Singh v. State of Punjab, [1978] 1 SCR 385 = A.I.R.
1977 SC 2147 @ 2148; Gudikanti Narasihmalu
and Ors. v. Public Prosecutor, Govt of A.P., [1978] 2 SCR; 371 Reiterated.
Tinglay v. Dolby, 14 N.W. 146; Rex v. Rose,
1898-18 CC 717;
67 QB 289; quoted with approval.
Courts should soberly size up police
exaggerations; of prospective misconduct of the accused if enlarged, lest
danger of excesses and injustice creep subtly into the discretionary curial
technique. Bad record and police prediction of criminal prospects to invalidate
the bail plea are admissible in principle, but shall not stampede the Court
into complacent refusal. The endemic pathology of factious scrimmage and
bloodshed should be preempted by suitable safe guards. [785 F-G] To answer the
test of reasonableness subject to- the need for securing the presence of the
bail applicant, the Court must also weigh the contrary factors like-(i) the
better chances which a man on bail has to prepare or present his case than one
remanded in custody, (ii) promotion of public justice, (iii) the considerable
public expenses in keeping in custody where no danger of disappearance or
disturbance can arise and (iv) the deplorable condition verging on the inhuman
of our sub-jails. [784 G-H; 785 A] In the instant case, the following
'significant factors frown' upon continuance of incarceration and favour
provisional but conditional enlargement of the petitioners.
(a) Petitioners 1 to 5 have suffered
sentences in some measures having been imprisoned for about twenty months.
(b) When the High Court entertained the
appeal, the State did not press for their custody for apprehended abscondence
or menace to peace and justice.
(c) The sixth Petitioner had been on bail in
the Sessions Court and all the petitioners had been free during the pendency of
the appeal.
(d) There is nothing indicated to show that
during the long five years, when the petitioners had been out of prison,
pending appeal, there had been any conduct on their part suggestive of
disturbing the peace of #he locality, threatening anyone in the village or
otherwise thwarting the life of the community or the cause of justice and (e)
All the petitioners 1 to 5 are the entire male members of a family and their
remaining in jail will jeopardise their defence in this Court., [779 F, 790
B-E] 779
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal
Misc.Petition,No. 191 of 1978.
in the Matter of:- CRIMINAL APPEAL No. 274 of
1977 R. k. Jain for the Petitioner.
D. P. Uniyad and O. P. Rana for the Responent
The Order of the Court was delivered by KRISHNA IYER, J.-The petitioners have
moved for bail setting out special grounds in support of the prayer. The State
opposes on various grounds which we will presently set out.
One of us sitting as a Chamber Judge in
Gudikanti Narasihmalu and others v., Public Prosecutor, Govt. of AP(1) had
considered this question at some length and since the principles set out herein
commend themselves to us,we are proceeding on the same lines and are inclined
to reach the same conclusion.
Briefly we will state the facts pertinent to
the, present petition and prayer and proceed thereafter to ratiocinate on the
relevant criteria in considering the interlocutory relief of bail. Right at the
beginning, we must mention that, at an earlier stage, their application for
bail was rejected by this, Court on September 7, 1977. But an order refusing an
application for bail does not necessarily preciude another, on a later
occasion, giving more materials, further, developments and different
considerations. While we surely must set store by this circumstance, we cannot
accede to the faint plea that we are, barred from second consideration' at a
later stage. An interim direction is not a conclusive adjudication, and updated
reconsideration is not over turning an earlier negation. In this view, we
entertain the application and evaluate the merits pro and con.
Shri R.K. Jain has brought to our notice
certain significant factors which frown upon continuance of incarceration and
favour provisional, perhaps conditional enlargement of the applicants.
All the petitioners were charged with an
offence of murder under s.302 I.P.C. but all of them were acquitted by the,
Sessions Court as early as November 4, 1972. The, State successfully appealed
against the acquittal and the High Court, reversing the, findings of the,
Sessions Court, held all the petitioners guilty and sentenced them all to life
imprisonment. This judgment was pronounced on May 20, 1977, after an
unfortunately tragic sojourn of five years 'for an appeal in a murder case. Our
justice, system, even in grave cases, suffers from slow motion syndrome which
is lethal to "fair trial"., whatever the ultimate decision' Speedy
justice is a component of social justice since the community, as a whole, is
concerned in the criminal being condignly and finaly punished within a
reasonable and the innocent being absolved from the incordinate ordeal of
criminal proceedings. This is, (1) [1978] 2 S.C.R.371 780 by the way, although
it is important that judicial business management by engineering, not
tinkering, so as to produce efficient expedition, is in urgent, high-priority
item on the agenda of court reform, to be adically undertaken none to soon.
Back to the necessary facts. On the High
Court upsetting the acquittal, the petitioners have come up to this Court
exercising their statutory right to appeal. The present petition, as earlier
stated, is the second one for bail, the first having been rejected about six
months ago. The petitioners 1 to 5 have suffered sentence in some Measure, having.
been imprisoned for about twenty months. The sixth petitioner had 'been on bail
in the Sessions Court and all the petitioners had been free during the pendency
of the appeal.
Certain other pregnant particulars deserve
special mention.
All the petitioners 1 to 5 are the entire
male members of a family, and one point mentioned by Shri Jain is that all of
them are in jail. Their defence in this Court may, therefore, be jeopardised.
Another factor, equally meaningful, is that there is nothing indicated before
us to show that during the long five years, when the petitioners had been out
of prison, pending appeal, there had been any conduct on their part suggestive
of disturbing the peace, of the locality, threatening anyone in the village or
otherwise thwarting the life of the community or the course of justice. Nay
more. When the High Court entertained the appeal, the State did not press for
their custody for apprehended abscondence or menace to peace and justice. It
must be noticed that the episode of murder itself is attributed as the outcome
of a faction fight or feud between the two clans in the village, not an unusual
phenomenon in rural India riven by rivalry of castes, sects and gens.
This is, of course, a survival of primitive
tribalism, as it were, but cannot be wished away unless sociological
therapeutics were applied. The pharmacopoeia of the Penal Code is no sufficient
curative. Nevertheless, we have to remember the reality of the village feud and
consequent proneness to, flare ups and recrudescence of criminal conflicts.
Against this backdrop of social and
individual facts we must consider the motion for bail. The correct legal
approach has been clouded in the past by focus on the ferocity of the crime to
the neglect of the real purposes of bail or jail and indifferent to many other
sensitive and sensible circumstances which deserve judicial, notice. The whole
issue, going by decisional material and legal literature has been relegated to
a twilight zone of the criminal justice system. Courts have often acted
intuitively or reacted traditionally, so much the fate of applicants for bail
at the High Court level and in the, Supreme Court, has largely hinged on the
hunch of the bench as on expression of 'judicial discretion'. A scientific
treatment is the desideratum.
The Code is cryptic on this topic and the
court prefers to be tacit, be the order custodial or not. And yet, the issue is
one of liberty, justice, public safety and burden on the public treasury, all
of which insists that a developed jurisprudence of bail is integral to a
socially sensitized judicial process. As Chamber Judge in the summit court I
have to 781 deal with this uncanalised case-flow, ad hoc response to the docket
being the flickering candle light. So it is desirable that the subject disposed
of on basic principle, not improvised brevity draped as discretion. Personal
liberty, deprived whom bail is value of our constitutional system recognised
Under Art. 21 that curial power to negate it is a great trust exercisable, not
casually but judicially, with lively concern for the cost to the individual and
the community. To glamorise impressionistic orders as discretionary may, on
occasions, make a litigative gamble, decisive of a fundamental right. After
all, personal liberty of an accused or convict is fundamental, suffering lawful
eclipse only in terms of "procedure established by law". The last
four words of Art. 21 are the life of that human right.
The doctrine of Police, Power,,
constitutionally validates punitive processes for the maintenance of public
order, security of the State, national integrity and the interest of the public
generally. Even so, having regard to the solemn issue involved, deprivation of
personal freedom, ephemeral or enduring, must be founded on the most serious
considerations relevant to the welfare objectives of society, specified in the
Constitution.
What then, is 'judicial discretion' in this
bail context? In the elegant words of Benjamin Cardozo.
"The judge, even when he is free, is
still not wholly free. He is not to innovate at pleasure. He is not a
knight-errant roaming at will in pursuit of his own ideal of beauty or of
goodness. He is to draw his inspiration from consecrated principles. He is not
to yield to spasmodic sentiment, to vague and unregulated benevolence. He is to
exercise a discretion informed by tradition, methodized by analogy, disciplined
by system, and subordinated to 'the primordial necessity of order in the social
life'. Wide enough in all conscience is the field of discretion that
remains." (The Nature of Judicial Process-Yale University Press (1921).
Even so it is useful to notice the tart terms
of Lord Camdon that "the discretion of a judge is the law of tyrants: it
is always unknown, it is different in different men; it is casual, and depends
upon constitution temper and passion. In the best, it is often times caprice;
in the worst, it is every vice, folly and passion to which human nature is
liable. . . . " (I Bovu. Law Dict., Rawles' III Revision p. 685-quoted in
Judicial Discretion-National College of the State Judiciary, Reno, Nevada p.
14).
Some jurists have regarded the term 'judicial
discretion' as a misnomer. Nevertheless, the vesting of 'discretion is the
unspoken but inescapable, silent command of our judicial system, and those who
exercise it will remember that 782 discretion, when applied to a court of
justice, means sound discretion guided by law.
It must be governed by rule, not by,humour,
it must not be arbitrary, vague and fanciful but legal and regular.
(Attributed to Lord Mansfield Tinglay v. Dolby,
14 N.W. 146) "An appeal, to a judge's discretion is an appeal to his
judicial conscience. The discretion must be exercised, not in opposition to,
but in accordance with, established principles of law." Judicial discretion,
(ibid) p. 33 Having grasped the core concept of judicial discretion and the
constitutional perspective in which the 'Court must operate public policy by a
restraint on liberty, we have to proceed to see what are the relevant criteria
for granty or refusal of bail in the case of a person who has either been
convicted and has appealed or one whose conviction has been set aside but leave
has been granted by this Court to appeal against the acquittal. "What is
often forgotten, and therefore warrants reminder, is the object to keep a
person in judicial custody pending trial or disposal of an appeal.
Lord Russel, C.J. said "I observe that
in this case bail was refused for the prisoner. It cannot be too strongly
impressed on the, magistracy of the country that bail is not to be withhold as
a punishment, but that the requirements as to bail are merely to secure the
attendance of the prisoner at trial." (R.v. Rose 1898-18Cox CC. 717: 67
LJOB 289- quoted in 'The granting of Bail', Mod. Law Rev. Vol. 81, Jan 1968 p.
40, 48).
This theme was developed by Lord Russel of
killowen C. J., when he charged the grand jury at Salisbury Assizes, 1899
"....it was the duty of magistrates to admit accused persons to bail,
wherever practicable, unless there were strong grounds for supposing that such
persons would not appear to take their trial. It was not the poorer classes who
did not appear, for their circumstances were such as to tie them to the place
where, they carried on their work. They had not the golden wings with which to
fly from justice." (1899) 63 J. P. 193, Mod. Law Rev. p. 49 (ibid) In
Archbold it is stated that "The proper test of whether bail should be
granted or refused is whether it is probable that the defendant will appear to
take his trial ....
The test should be applied by reference to
the following considerations 783 (1) The nature of the accusation (2) The
nature of the, evidence in support of the accusation (a) The severity of the
Punishment which conviction will entail....
(4) Whether the sureties are independent, OF
indemnified by the accused person ...." (Mod. Law Rev. ibid. P.
53-Archbold, pleading Evidence and Practice in Criminal Cases, 56th edn.,
London,1966 para 203) Perhaps, this is an overly simplistic statement and we
must remember the constitutional focus in Art. 21 and 19 before following
diffuse observations and practices in the English system. Even in England there
is a growing awareness that the working of the bail system requires a second
look from the point of view of correct legal criteria and sound principles, has
been pointed out by Pr. Bottomley. (The Granting of Bail: Principles and
Practices : Mod. Law Rev.
ibid p.40 to 54).
Let us have a glance around which other
relevant factors must revolve.When the case is finally disposed of and a person
is sentenced to incarceration, things stand on a different footing. We are
concerned with the penultimate stage and the principal rule to guide release on
bail should be to secure the presence of the applicant who seeks to be
liberated, to take judgement and serve sentence in the event of the court
punishing him with imprisonment. In this perspective, relevance of
considerations is regulated by their nexus with the likely absence of the
applicant for fear of a severe sentence, if such be plausible in the case.
As Erle J. indicated, 'when the crime
charged, (of which a convictions has been sustained) is of the highest
magnitude, and the 'punishment of it assigned by law is of extreme severity,
the Court may reasonably presume, some evidence warranting, that no amount of
bail would secure the presence of the convict at the stage of judgment, should
he be en- larged. (Mod. Law Rev. p. 50 ibid, 1952 I.E. & B.I.). Lord
Campbell CJ concurred in this approach in that case and Coleridge J. down the
order of priorities as follows "I do not think that an accused party is
detained in custody because of his guilt, but because there are sufficient
probable grounds for the charge against him as to make it proper that he should
be tried, and because the detention is necessary to ensure his appearance at
trial, .It very important element in considering whether the party, if admitted
to bail, would appear to take his trial; and I think that in coming to a
determination on that point three elements will generally be found the most
important : the charge, the nature of the evidence by which it is supported,
784 and the punishment to which the, party would be liable if convicted. In the
present case, the charge is that of' wilful murder; the evidence contains an
admission by the prisoners of the truth of the charge, and the punishment of
the offence is, by law, death".
(Mod. Law Rev. ibid p. 50-51) 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.
Another relevant factor is as to whether the
course of justice would be thwarted by him who seeks the benignant jurisdiction
of the Court to be freed for the time being.
(Patrick Devlin The Criminal Prosecution in
England London) 1960, p. 75-Mod. Law Rev. ibid p. 54);
Thus the legal principle 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 a lying 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 expoit the
opportunity to inflict further crimes on the members of society. Bail
discretion, on the basis- of evidence about the criminal record of a defendant,
is therefore not an exercise in irrelevance.
The significance and sweep of Art. 21 make
the deprivation of liberty a matter of grave concern and permissible only when
the law authorising it is reasonable, even-handed and geared to the goals of
community good and State necessity spelt out in Art. 19. Indeed, the,
considerations I have set out as criteria are germane to the constitutional
proposition I have deduced. Reasonableness postulates intelligent care and
predicates that deprivation of freedom by refusal of bail is not for punitive
purpose, but for the bi-focal interests of justice-to the individual involved
and society affected.
We must weigh the contrary factors to answer them.
test of reasonableness, subject to the need for securing the presence of the
bail applicant. It makes sense to assume that a man on bail has a better chance
to Prepare or present his case than one remanded in custody. And if public
justice is to be promoted. mechanical detention should be demoted. In the
United States, which has a constitutional perspective close to ours, the
function of bail is limited, 'community roots' of the applicant are stressed
and, after the Vera Foundation's Manhattan Bail Project, monetary suretyship is
losing ground. The considerable public expense in keeping in custody where no
danger of 785 disappearance or disturbance can arise, is not a negligible
consideration. Equally important is the deplorable condition, verging on the
inhuman, of our sub-jails, that the unrewarding cruelty and expensive custody
of avoidable incarceration makes refusal of bail unreasonable and a policy
favouring release justly sensible.
A few other weighty factors deserve reference.
All deprivation of liberty is validated by social defense and individual
correction along an anti-criminal direction.
Public justice is central to the whole scheme
of bail law.
Fleeing justice must be forbidden but
punitive harshness should be minimised. Restorative devices to redeem the man,
even through community service, meditative drill, study classes or other
resources should be innovated, and playing foul with public peace by tampering
with evidence, intimidating witnesses or committing offences while on
judicially sanctioned 'free enterprise, should be provided against. No seeker
of justice shall play confidence tricks on the court or community. Thus,
conditions may be hung around bail orders, not to cripple but to protect. Such
is the holistic jurisdiction and humanistic orientation invoked by the judicial
discretion correlated to the values of our constitution.
-Viewed from this perspective,, we gain a
better insight into the ,rules of the game. When a person, charged with a grave
offence, has been acquitted at a stage, has the intermediate acquittal
pertinence to a bail plea when the appeal before ;his Court pends ? Yes, it
has. The panic which might prompt the accused to jump the gauntlet of justice
is less, having enjoyed the confidence of the court's verdict once. Concurrent
holdings of guilt hive the opposite effect. Again, the ground for denial of
provisional release becomes weaker where the fact stares us in the fact that a
fair finding-if that be so innocence has been recorded by one court. It may be
conclusive, for the judgment of acquittal may be ex facie wrong, the likelihood
of desperate reprisal, if enlarged, may be a deterrent and his own safety may
be more in prison than in the vengeful village where feuds have provoked the
violent offence. It depends. Antecedents of the man and socio-geographical
circumstances have a bearing only from this angle. Police exaggerations of
prospective misconduct of the accused, if enlarged, must be soberly sized up
lest danger of excesses and injustice creep subtly into the discretionery
curial technique. Bad record and police prediction of criminal prospects to
invalidate the bail plea are admissable in principle but shall not stampede the
court into a complacent refusal.
Realisim is a component of humanism which is
the heart of the legal system. We come across cases where parties have already
suffered 3, 4 and in one case (the other day it was unearthed) over 10 years in
prison. These persons may perhaps be acquitted-difficult to guess. If they are,
the injustice of innocence long in rigorous incarceration inflicted by the
protraction of curial processes is an irrevocable injury. And, taking a
pragmatic view, while life imprisonment may, in law, last a whole life, in
practice it hardily survives ten years, thanks to rules of remission. Thus, at
the worst, the prisoner 786 may have to serve some more years, and, at the
best, law is vicariously guilty of dilatory deprivation of citizen's liberty, a
consummation vigilantly to be vetoed. So, a circumstance of some consequence,
when considering a motion for bail, is the period in prison already spent and
the prospect of the appeal being delayed for hearing, having regard to the
suffocating crowd of dockets pressing before the few Benches.
It is , not out of place to mention that if
the State takes up a flexible attitude it may be possible to permit long spells
of parole, under controlled conditions, so that fear that the full freedom if
bailed out, might be abused, may be eliminated by this experimental measure,
punctuated by reversion to prison. Unremitting insulation in the harsh and
hardened company of prisoners leads to many unmention- able vices that
humanizing interludes of parole are part of the compassionate constitutionalism
of our system.
The basics being thus illuminated, we have to
apply them to the tangled knot of specifics projected by each case. The
delicate light of the law favours release unless countered by the negative
criteria necessitating that course. The corrective instinct of the law plays
upon release orders by strapping on to them protective and curative conditions.
Heavy bail from poor men is obviously wrong.
Poverty is society's malady and sympathy, not sternness, is the judicial
response.
Yet another factor which heavily tips the scales
of justice in favour of release Pendente lite is the thought best expressed, by
Justice Bhagwati, speaking for the Court in Kashmira Singh v. The State of
Punjab(1).
"The appellant, contends in this
application that ?ending the hearing of the appeal he should be released on
bail.
Now, the practice in this Court as also in
many of the High Court’s has been not to release on bail a person who has been
sentenced to life imprisonment for an offence under section 302 of the Indian
Penal Code. The question is whether this practice should be departed from and
if so in what circumstances. It is obvious that no practice howsoever
sanctified by usage and hallowed by time can be' allowed to prevail if it
operates to cause injustice. Every practice of the Court must find its ultimate
justification in the interest of justice. The practice not to release on bail a
person who has been sentenced to life imprisonment was evolved in the High
Courts and in this Court on the basis that once a person has been found guilty and
sentenced to life imprisonment, he should not be let loose, so long I as his
conviction and sentence are not set aside, but the underlying, postulate of
this practice was that the appeal of such person would be disposed of within a
measurable of time, so that if he is ultimately found to be innocent, he would
not have to remain in jail for an unduly long (1) [1978] 1 S.C.R. 385.== A.I.R.
1977 S.C. 2147 at 2148.
787 period. The rationale of this practice
can have no application where the Court is not in a position to dispose of the
appeal for five or six years. It would indeed be a travesty of justice to keep
a person in jail for a period of five or six years for an offence which is
ultimately found not to have been committed by him. Can the Court ever compensate
him for his incarceration which is found to be unjustified ? Would it be just
at all for the Court to tell a person : "We have admitted your appeal
because we think you have a prima facie case, but unfortunately we have no time
to hear your appeal for quite a few years and, therefore, until we hear your
appeal, you must remain in jail, even though you may be innocent ?" What
confidence would such administration of justice, inspire in the mind of the
public ? It may quite conceivably happen, and it has in fact happened in a few
cases in this Court, that a person may serve out his full term of imprisonment
before his appeal is taken up for hearing. Would a judge not be overwhelmed
with a feeling of contribution while acquitting such a person after hearing the
appeal? Would it not be an affront to his sense of justice? Of what avail would
the acquittal be to a person who has already served out his term of
imprisonment or at any rate a major part of it ? It is, therefore, absolutely
essential that the practice which this Court has been following in the past
must be reconsidered and so long as this Court is not in a position to hear the
appeal of an accused within a reasonable period of time, the Court should
ordinarily unless there are cogent grounds for acting otherwise, release the
accused on bail in cases where special leave has been granted to the accused to
appeal against his conviction and sentence." Having regard to this
constollation of considerations, carefully viewed in the jurisprudential setting
above silhourted, we are of the view, that subject to certain safeguards, the
petitioners are eligible to be enlarged on bail.
The endemic pathology of factious scrimmage
and blood-shed should be preempted by suitable safeguards, even if we are inclined
to bail out the petitioners. So, we direct that the petitioners be released on
their own recognisances in a sum of Rs. 5,000/- each, with one surety for each
in a like sum, subject to two conditions, viz., firstly, that the petitioners
shall not enter Bharaiyam village which is alleged to be the hot-bed of Plan
clashes according to the prosecution and secondly, the petitioners shall report
at the Tandiawan Police Station (District Hardor) once every week. We direct
the Sub-Inspector of Police station concerned to see that both the conditions
are observed. In 'the event 'of breach of either condition, the prosecution
will be at liberty to move this Court for cancellation Of the bail hereby
granted.
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