Hitendra
Vishnu Thakur Vs. State of Maharashtra
[1994] INSC 358 (12
July 1994)
Anand,
A.S. (J) Anand, A.S. (J) Faizan Uddin (J)
CITATION:
1994 AIR 2623 1994 SCC (4) 602 JT 1994 (4) 255 1994 SCALE (3)105
ACT:
HEAD NOTE:
The
Judgment of the Court was delivered by DR ANAND, J.- In this batch of criminal
appeals and special leave petitions (criminal) the three meaningful questions
which require our consideration are :
(1)
When can the provisions of Section 3(1) of the Terrorist and Disruptive
Activities (Prevention) Act, 1987 (hereinafter referred to as the TADA) be
attracted?
(2) Is
the 1993 Amendment, amending Section 167(2) of the Code of Criminal Procedure
by modifying Section 20(4)(b) and adding a new provision as 20(4)(bb),
applicable to the pending cases i.e. is it retrospective in operation? and
(3)
What is the true ambit and scope of Section 20(4) and Section 20(8) of TADA in
the matter of grant of ball to an accused brought before the Designated Court
and the factors which the Designated Court has to keep in view while dealing
with an application for grant of bail under Section 20(4) and for grant of
extension of time to the prosecution for further investigation under clause
(bb) of Section 20(4) and incidentally whether the conditions contained in
Section 20(8) TADA control the grant of bail under Section 20(4) of the Act
also? We shall take up for consideration these questions in seriatim.
2.
When can the provisions of Section 3(1) of TADA be attracted? 616 Learned
counsel for the appellants submitted that even though the constitutional
validity of Section 3 of TADA has been upheld by a Constitution Bench of this
Court in Kartar Singh v. State of Punjabi, nonetheless keeping in view the
stringent nature of the provisions of TADA the offence constituted by Section 3
of TADA must be the one which qualifies stricto sensu as a 'terrorist act' and
unless the crime alleged against an accused can be classified as a 'terrorist
act' in letter and in spirit, Section 3(1) of TADA has no application and an accused
shall have to be tried under the ordinary penal law and in such a fact
situation, it is a statutory obligation cast on the Designated Court to
transfer the case from that court for its trial by the regular courts under the
ordinary criminal law in view of the provisions of Section 18 of TADA. It is
submitted that the Designated Court should not, without proper application of
mind, charge-sheet or convict an accused under Section 3 of TADA simply because
the investigating officer decides to include that section while filing the challan
and that it is not open to the State to apply TADA to the ordinary problems
arising out of disturbance of law and order or even to situations arising out
of the disturbance of public order - a more serious type of crime alone would
justify trial under TADA.
3. Shri
K.T.S. Tulsi, the learned Additional Solicitor General and Shri Madhava Reddy,
Senior Advocate, appearing for the State on the other hand submitted that since
the constitutional validity of Section 3 of TADA has been upheld by a
Constitution Bench in Kartar Singh case', it is not permissible for this Bench
to re-examine its validity.on the basis of some argument which might have been
raised before the Constitution Bench but was not so raised. It was pointed out
that the three grounds of challenge which were raised before the Constitution
Bench to question the legality and the efficaciousness of Sections 3 and 4 of
TADA viz. : (SCC p. 650, para 140) "(1) These two sections cover the acts
which constitute offences under ordinary laws like the Indian Penal Code, Arms
Act and Explosive Substances Act;
(2)
There is no guiding principle laid down when the executive can proceed under
the ordinary laws or under this impugned Act of 1987; and (3) This Act and the
Sections 3 and 4 thereof should be struck down on the principle laid down in
State of W.B. v. Anwar Ali Sarkar2 and followed in many other cases including
A.R. Antulay v. Union of India3." were considered by the Constitution
Bench and while upholding the vires and validity of Sections 3 and 4 of TADA,
all the three grounds of challenge were negatived and therefore after the
Constitution Bench judgment, it is not permissible to read within the
provisions of Section 3 anything more than 1 (1994) 3 SCC 569: 1994 SCC (Cri)
899: JT (1994) 2 SC 423: 1994 (1) Apex Decisions SC (Cri) 413 2 1952 SCR 284:
AIR 1952 SC 75 : 1952 Cri LJ 5 10 3 (1988) 2 SCC 764 617 what the Legislature
has specifically provided therein. It was urged that to combat the menace of
terrorism, it is necessary that restrictive interpretation should not be placed
on the provisions of Section 3 of TADA and simply because the offences under
Section 3 of TADA and under the ordinary penal law overlap, the court should
not lay down as a general proposition that Section 3 of TADA is inapplicable in
all such situations where the offences overlap.
4. The
expression 'terrorist act' has been defined in Section 2(1)(h) of TADA. It
provides that the expression terrorist act "'has the meaning assigned to
it in sub- section (1) of Section 3" Section 3(1) provides as under:
"
3. Punishment for terrorist acts.- (1) Whoever with intent to overawe the
Government as by law established or to strike terror in the people or any
section of the people or to alienate any section of the people or to adversely
affect the harmony amongst different sections of the people does any act or
thing by using bombs, dynamite or other explosive substances or inflammable
substances or firearms or other lethal weapons or poisons or noxious gases or
other chemicals or by any other substances (whether biological or otherwise) of
a hazardous nature in such a manner as to cause, or as is likely to cause,
death of, or injuries to, any person or persons or loss of, or damage to, or
destruction of, property or disruption of any supplies or services essential to
the life of the community, or detains any person and threatens to kill or
injure such person in order to compel the Government or any other person to do
or abstain from doing any act, commits a terrorist act."
5.
Section 3 when analysed would show that whoever with intent
(i) to
overawe the Government as by law established; or
(ii) to
strike terror in the people or any section of the people; or
(iii) to
alienate any section of the people; or
(iv) to
adversely affect the harmony amongst different sections of the people, does any
act or things by using
(a) bombs
or dynamite, or
(b) other
explosive substances, or
(c) inflammable
substances, or
(d) firearms,
or
(e) other
lethal weapons, or
(f) poisons
or noxious gases or other chemicals, or
(g) any
other substances (whether biological or otherwise) of a hazardous nature in
such a manner as to cause or as is likely to cause
(i) death,
or
(ii) injuries
to any person or persons,
(iii) loss
of or damage to or destruction of property, or
(iv) disruption
of any supplies or services essential to the life of the community, or
(v) detains
any person and threatens to kill or injure such person in order to compel the
Government or any other person to do or abstain from doing any act, commits a
'terrorist act' punishable under Section 3 of TADA.
6. It
is, thus, seen that most of the criminal activities constituting a terrorist
act and offences under the penal law, do overlap. However, where an act complained
of is punishable under Section 3 of TADA, it invites more stringent punishment
than the punishment prescribed for the offence under the ordinary penal law.
Section 6 of TADA even provides for imposition of enhanced penalties for a
person who with the intent to aid any terrorist or disruptionist activity,
contravenes any of the provisions of or any rule made 618 under the Arms Act,
1959, the Explosives Act, 1884, the Explosive Substances Act, 1908 or the
Inflammable Substances Act, 1952 and renders him liable to punishment for not
less than 5 years. The punishment may, in certain cases, extend to imprisonment
for life with fine, notwithstanding anything contained in the provisions of
acts or the rules made under the respective acts.
7.
'Terrorism' is one of the manifestations of increased lawlessness and cult of
violence. Violence and crime constitute a threat to an established order and
are a revolt against a civilised society. 'Terrorism' has not been defined
under TADA nor is it possible to give a precise definition of 'terrorism' or
lay down what constitutes 'terrorism'. It may be possible to describe it as use
of violence when its most important result is not merely the physical and
mental damage of the victim but the prolonged psychological effect it produces
or has the potential of producing on the society as a whole. There may be
death, injury, or destruction of property or even deprivation of individual
liberty in the process but the extent and reach of the intended terrorist
activity travels beyond the effect of an ordinary crime capable of being
punished under the ordinary penal law of the land and its main objective is to
overawe the Government or disturb harmony of the society or "terrorise"
people and the society and not only those directly assaulted, with a view to
disturb even tempo, peace and tranquillity of the society and create a sense of
fear and insecurity. A 'terrorist' activity does not merely arise by causing
disturbance of law and order or of public order. The fall out of the intended
activity must be such that it travels beyond the capacity of the ordinary law
enforcement agencies to tackle it under the ordinary penal law. Experience has
shown us that 'terrorism' is generally an attempt to acquire or maintain power
or control by intimidation and causing fear and helplessness in the minds of
the people at large or any section thereof and is a totally abnormal
phenomenon. What distinguishes 'terrorism' from other forms of violence,
therefore, appears to be the deliberate and systematic use of coercive
intimidation.
More
often than not, a hardened criminal today takes advantage of the situation and
by wearing the cloak of 'terrorism', aims to achieve for himself acceptability
and respectability in the society because unfortunately in the States affected
by militancy, a 'terrorist' is projected as a hero by his group and often even
by the misguided youth.
It is
therefore, essential to treat such a criminal and deal with him differently
than an ordinary criminal capable of being tried by the ordinary courts under
the penal law of the land. Even though the crime committed by a 'terrorist' and
an ordinary criminal would be overlapping to an extent but then it is not the
intention of the Legislature that every criminal should be tried under TADA,
where the fall out of his activity does not extend beyond the normal frontiers
of the ordinary criminal activity. Every 'terrorist' may be a criminal but
every criminal cannot be given the label of a 'terrorist' only to set in motion
the more stringent provisions of TADA. The criminal activity in order to invoke
TADA must be committed with the requisite intention as contemplated by Section
3(1) of the Act by use of such weapons as have 619 been enumerated in Section
3(1) and which cause or are likely to result in the offences as mentioned in
the said section.
8. The
Constitution Bench noticed that the offences arising out of a terrorist or
disruptive activity may overlap the offences covered by the ordinary penal law
and dealing with the situation under which the provisions of TADA would be
attracted, observed: (SCC p. 653, para 145) "As we have indicated above,
the Act tends to be very harsh and drastic containing the stringent provisions
and provides minimum punishments and to some other offences enhanced penalties
also. The provisions prescribing special procedures aiming at speedy disposal
of cases, departing from the procedures prescribed under the ordinary
procedural law are evidently for the reasons that the prevalent ordinary
procedural law was found to be inadequate and not sufficiently effective to
deal with the offenders indulging in terrorist and disruptive activities,
secondly that the incensed offences are arising out of the activities of the
terrorists and disruptionists which disrupt or are intended to disrupt even the
sovereignty and territorial integrity of India or which may bring about or
support any claim for the cession of any part of India or the secession of any
part of India from the Union, and which create terror and a sense of insecurity
in the minds of the people. Further the Legislature being aware of the
aggravated nature of the offences have brought this drastic change in the
procedure under this law so that the object of the legislation may not be
defeated and nullified." (emphasis supplied)
9. In Usmanbhai
Dawoodbhai Memon v. State of Gujarat4, this Court observed : (SCC p. 285, para
17) "The legislature by enacting the law has treated terrorism as a
special criminal problem and created a special court called a Designated Court
to deal with the special problem and provided for a special procedure for the
trial of such offences. ... The Act is a special Act and creates a new class of
offences called terrorist acts and disruptive activities as defined in Sections
3(1) and 4(2) and provides for a special procedure for the trial of such
offences."
10.
Again, in Niran an Singh Karam Singh Punjabi, Advocate v. Jitendra Bhimraj
Bijjaya5, after noticing with approval the opinion of this Court in Usmanbhai
case4 it was observed : (SCC p. 86, para 8) "... the provisions of the Act
need not be resorted to if the nature of the activities of the accused can be
checked and controlled under the ordinary law of the land. It is only in those
cases where the law enforcing machinery finds the ordinary law to be inadequate
or not sufficiently effective for tacking the menace of terrorist and
disruptive activities that resort should be had to the drastic provisions of
the Act. While invoking a criminal statute, such as the Act, the prosecution is
4 (1988) 2 SCC 271: 1988 SCC (Cri) 318 5_ (1990) 4 SCC 76: 1991 SCC (Cri) 47
620 duty-bound to show from the record of the case and the documents collected
in the course of investigation that facts emerging therefrom prima facie
constitute an offence within the letter of the law. When a statute provides
special or enhanced punishments as compared to the punishments prescribed for
similar offences under the ordinary penal laws of the country, a higher
responsibility and duty is cast on the Judge to make sure there exists prima
facie evidence for supporting the charge levelled by the prosecution.
Therefore, when a law visits a person with serious penal consequences extra
care must be taken to ensure that those whom the legislature did not intend to
be covered by the express language of the statute are not roped in by
stretching the language of the law." The Court then considered the facts
in Niranjan Singh case5 and referred to the statement of the witnesses which
had been relied upon by the prosecution to attract the provisions of Section
3(1) of the Act. The Court found that the intention of the accused persons in
that case was merely to eliminate Raju and Keshav for gaining supremacy in the
underworld. The Bench noticed that a statement had been made by the
investigating agency to the effect that the activities of the accused were
aimed at creating terror and fear in the minds of the people in general and observed
:
(SCC
p. 88, para 10) "A mere statement to the effect that the show of such
violence would create terror or fear in the minds of the people and none would
dare to oppose them cannot constitute an offence under Section 3(1) of the Act.
That may indeed be the fall out of the violent act but that cannot be said to
be the intention of the perpetrators of the crime. It is clear from the
statement extracted earlier that the intention of the accused persons was to
eliminate the rivals and gain supremacy in the underworld so that they may be
known as the bullies of the locality and would be dreaded as such. But it
cannot be said that their intention was to strike terror in the people or a
section of the people and thereby commit a terrorist act. It is clear that
there was rivalry between the party of the accused on the one hand and Raju and
Keshav on the other.
The
former desired to gain supremacy which necessitated the elimination of the
latter.
With
that in view they launched an attack on Raju and Keshav, killed the former and
injured the latter. Their intention was clearly to eliminate them and not to
strike terror in the people or a section of the people. It would have been a
different matter if to strike terror some innocent persons were killed. In that
case the intention would be to strike terror and the killings would be to
achieve that objective. In the instant case the intention was to liquidate Raju
and Keshav and thereby achieve the objective of gaining supremacy in the
underworld. The consequence of such violence is bound to cause panic and fear
but the intention of committing the crime cannot be said to be to strike terror
in the people or any section of the people."
11.
Thus, keeping in view the settled position that the provisions of Section 3 of
TADA have been held to be constitutionally valid in Kartar 621 Singh case' and
from the law laid down by this Court in Usmanbhai4 and Niranjan5 cases, it
follows that an activity which is sought to be punished under Section 3(1) of
TADA has to be such which cannot be classified as a mere law and order problem
or disturbance of public order or even disturbance of the even tempo of the
life of the community of any specified locality but is of the nature which
cannot be tackled as an ordinary criminal activity under the ordinary penal law
by the normal law-enforcement agencies because the intended extent and reach of
the criminal activity of the 'terrorist' is such which travels beyond the
gravity of the mere disturbance of public order even of a 'virulent nature' and
may at times transcend the frontiers of the locality and may include such
anti-national activities which throw a challenge to the very integrity and
sovereignty of the country in its democratic polity. The Constitution Bench in Kartar
Singh case1 repelled the submission of Mr Jethmalani that the preamble of the
Act gives a clue "that the terrorist and disruptive activities only mean a
virulent form of the disruption of public order" and found the argument to
be "inconceivable and unacceptable". Thus, unless the Act complained
of falls strictly within the letter and spirit of Section 3(1) of TADA and is
committed with the intention as envisaged by that section by means of the
weapons etc. as are enumerated therein with the motive as postulated thereby,
an accused cannot be tried or convicted for an offence under Section 3(1) of
TADA. When the extent and reach of the crime committed with the intention as
envisaged by Section 3(1), transcends the local barriers and the effect of the
criminal act can be felt in other States or areas or has the potential of that
result being felt there, the provisions of Section 3(1) would certainly be
attracted. Likewise, if it is only as a consequence of the criminal act that
fear, terror or/and panic is caused but the intention of committing the
particular crime cannot be said to be the one strictly envisaged by Section
3(1), it would be impermissible to try or convict and punish an accused under
TADA. The commission of the crime with the intention to achieve the result as
envisaged by the section and not merely where the consequence of the crime
committed by the accused create that result, would attract the provisions of
Section 3(1) of TADA. Thus, if for example a person goes on a shooting spree
and kills a number of persons, it is bound to create terror and panic in the
locality but if it was not committed with the requisite intention as
contemplated by the section, the offence would not attract Section 3(1) of
TADA. On the other hand, if a crime was committed with the intention to cause
terror or panic or to alienate a section of the people or to disturb the harmony
etc. it would be punishable under TADA, even if no one is killed and there has
been only some person who has been injured or some damage etc. has been caused
to the property, the provisions of Section 3(1) of TADA would be squarely
attracted. Where the crime is committed with a view to overawe the Government
as by law established or is intended to alienate any section of the people or
adversely affect the harmony amongst different sections of the people and is
committed in the manner specified in Section 3(1) of TADA, no difficulty would
arise to hold that such an offence falls within the ambit and scope of the said
622 provision. Some difficulty, however, arises where the intended activity of
the offender results in striking terror or creating fear and panic amongst the
people in general or a section thereof. It is in this situation that the courts
have to be cautious to draw a line between the crime punishable under the
ordinary criminal law and the ones which are punishable under Section 3(1) of
TADA. It is of course neither desirable nor possible to catalogue the
activities which would strictly bring the case of an accused under Section 3(1)
of TADA. Each case will have to be decided on its own facts and no rule of
thumb can be applied.
12. Of
late, we have come across some cases where the Designated Courts have
charge-sheeted and/or convicted an accused person under TADA even though there
is not even an iota of evidence from which it could be inferred, even prima
facie, let alone conclusively, that the crime was committed with the intention
as contemplated by the provisions of TADA, merely on the statement of the
investigating agency to the effect that the consequence of the criminal act
resulted in causing panic or terror ill the society or in a section thereof.
Such orders result in the misuse of TADA.
Parliament,
through Section 20-A of TADA has clearly manifested its intention to treat the
offences under TADA seriously inasmuch as under Section 20-A(1),
notwithstanding anything contained in the Code of Criminal Procedure, no
information about the commission of an offence under TADA shall even be
recorded without the prior approval of the District Superintendent of Police
and under Section 20-A(2), no court shall take cognisance of any offence under TADA
without the previous sanction of the authorities prescribed therein. Section
20-A was thus introduced in the Act with a view to prevent the abuse of the
provisions of TADA.
13. We
would, therefore, at this stage like to administer a word of caution to the
Designated Courts regarding invoking the provisions of TADA merely because the
investigating officer at some stage of the investigation chooses to add an
offence under same (sic some) provisions of TADA against an accused person,
more often than not while opposing grant of bail, anticipatory or otherwise.
The Designated Courts should always consider carefully the material available
on the record and apply their mind to see whether the provisions of TADA are
even prima facie attracted.
14.
The Act provides for the constitution of one or more Designated Courts either
by the Central Government or the State Government by notification in the
Official Gazette to try specified cases or class or group of cases under the
Act. The Act makes every offence punishable under the Act or any rule made thereunder
to be a cognizable offence within the meaning of Section 2(c) of the CrPC. The
Act vests jurisdiction in the Designated Court to try all such offences under
the Act by giving precedence over the trial of any other case against an
accused in any other court (not being a Designated Court) notwithstanding
anything contained in the Code or any other law for the time being in force.
The
conferment of power on the Designated Courts to try the offences triable by them,
punishable with imprisonment for a term not exceeding three years or with fine
or with both, 623 in a summary manner in accordance with the procedure
prescribed in the CrPC notwithstanding anything contained in Section 260(1) or
262 CrPC by applying the provisions of Sections 263-265 of the Act is a marked
departure. The right of appeal straight to the Supreme Court against any
judgment, sentence or order not being an interlocutory order vide Section 19(1)
of the Act demonstrates the seriousness with which Parliament has treated the
offences under TADA.
An
onerous duty is therefore cast on the Designated Courts to take extra care to scrutinise
the material on the record and apply their mind to the evidence and documents
available with the investigating agency before charge-sheeting an accused for
an offence under TADA. The stringent provisions of the Act coupled with the
enhanced punishment prescribed for the offences under the Act make the task of
the Designated Court even more onerous, because the graver the offence, greater
should be the care taken to see that the offence must strictly fall within the
four corners of the Act before a charge is framed against an accused person.
Where
the Designated Court without as much as even finding a prima facie case on the
basis of the material on the record, proceeds to charge-sheet an accused under
any of the provisions of TADA, merely on the statement of the investigating
agency, it acts merely as a post office of the investigating agency and does
more harm to meet the challenge arising out of the 'terrorist' activities
rather than deterring terrorist activities. The remedy in such cases would be
worse than the disease itself and the charge against the State of misusing the
provisions of TADA would gain acceptability, which would be bad both for the
criminal and the society. Therefore, it is the obligation of the investigating
agency to satisfy the Designated court from the material collected by it during
the investigation, and not merely by the opinion formed by the investigating
agency, that the activity of the 'terrorist' falls strictly within the
parameters of the provisions of TADA before seeking to charge-sheet an accused
under TADA. The Designated
Court must record its
satisfaction about the existence of a prima facie case on the basis of the
material on the record before it proceeds to frame a charge-sheet against an
accused for offences covered by TADA. Even after an accused has been
charge-sheeted for an offence under TADA and the prosecution leads evidence in
the case it is an obligation of the Designated Court to take extra care to
examine the evidence with a view to find out whether the provisions of the Act
apply or not. The Designated Court is, therefore, expected to carefully examine
the evidence and after analysing the same come to a firm conclusion that the
evidence led by the prosecution has established that the case of the accused
falls strictly within the four corners of the Act before recording a conviction
against an accused under TADA.
15.
Thus, the true ambit and scope of Section 3(1) is that no conviction under
Section 3(1) of TADA can be recorded unless the evidence led by the prosecution
establishes that the offence was committed with the intention as envisaged by
Section 3(1) by means of the weapons etc. as enumerated in the section and was
committed with the motive as postulated by the said section. Even at the cost
of repetition, we may say that where it is only the 624 consequence of,.the
criminal act of an accused that terror, fear or panic is caused, but the crime
was not committed with the intention as envisaged by Section 3(1) to achieve
the objective as envisaged by the section, an accused should not be convicted
for an offence under Section 3(1) of TADA.
To
bring home a charge under Section 3(1) of the Act, the terror or panic etc.
must be actually intended with a view to achieve the result as envisaged by the
said section and not be merely an incidental fall out or a consequence of the
criminal activity. Every crime, being a revolt against the society, involves
some violent activity which results in some degree of panic or creates some
fear or terror in the people or a section thereof, but unless the panic, fear
or terror was intended and was sought to achieve either of the objectives as
envisaged in Section 3(1), the offence would not fall stricto sensu under TADA.
Therefore, as was observed in Kartar Singh case' by the Constitution Bench :
(SCC
p. 759, para 45 1 ) "Section 3 operates when a person not only intends to
overawe the Government or create terror in people etc. but he uses the arms and
ammunition which results in death or is likely to cause death and damage to
property etc. In other words, a person becomes a terrorist or is guilt), of
terrorist activity when intention, action and consequence all the three
ingredients are found to exist."
16.
Where the Designated Court finds, after taking cognisance of the offence, that
the offence does not even prima facie fall under TADA, it must proceed to act
under Section 18 of TADA. That section reads as follows :
1 8.
Power to transfer cases to regular courts.-Where, after taking cognisance of
any offence, a Designated Court is of opinion that the offence is not triable
by it, it shall, notwithstanding that it has no jurisdiction to try such
offence, transfer the case for the trial of such offence to any court having
jurisdiction under the Code and the court to which the case is transferred may
proceed with the trial of the offence as if it had taken cognisance of the
offence."
17. Section
1 8 vests jurisdiction in a Designated Court to transfer the case for trial by
any court having jurisdiction under the CrPC where after taking cognisance of
an offence, the Designated Court is of the opinion, for reasons to be recorded,
that the offence is not such as is triable by the Designated Court inasmuch as
the offence does not fall within the true ambit and parameters of the
provisions of TADA, it is obliged to transfer the case to the court of
competent jurisdiction for its trial and on such transfer, the court to which
the case is so transferred acquires the jurisdiction to proceed with the trial
of the offence, as if the transferee court had itself taken cognisance of the
offence.
18.
Thus, having dealt with the ambit and scope of Section 3(1) of TADA and
considered the situations where its provisions may be attracted ill the
established facts and circumstances of the case, we shall now take up for
consideration questions 2 and 3 mentioned in the earlier part of this 625
judgment. Both these questions essentially revolve around the grant of bail to
an accused under TADA.
19.
Section 20(4) of TADA makes Section 167 of CrPC applicable in relation to case
involving an offence punishable under TADA, subject to the modifications
specified therein. Clause (a) thereof, provides that reference in sub-section
(1) of Section 167 to "Judicial Magistrates" shall be construed as
reference to "Judicial Magistrate" or "Executive
Magistrate" or "Special Executive Magistrates" while clause (b)
provided that reference in subsection (2) of Section 167 to '15 days', '90
days' and '60 days' wherever they occur shall be construed as reference to '60
days', 'one year' and 'one year' respectively. This section was amended in 1993
by the Amendment Act 43 of 1993 with effect from 22-5-1993 and the period of
'one year' and ,one year' in clause (b) was reduced to '180 days' and '180
days' respectively, by modification of sub-section (2) of Section 167. After
clause (b) of sub-section (4) of Section 20 of TADA, another clause (bb) was
inserted which reads :
"(bb)
in subsection (2), after the proviso, the following proviso shall be inserted,
namely:- 'Provided further that, if it is not possible to complete the
investigation within the said period of one hundred and eighty days, the
Designated Court shall extend the said period up to one year, on the report of
the Public Prosecutor indicating the progress of tile investigation and the
specific reasons for the detention of the accused beyond the said period of one
hundred and eighty days; and'
20.
Section 57 of tile Code of Criminal Procedure provides that a person arrested
shall not be detained in custody by the police for a period longer than that
which is reasonable but that such period shall not exceed 24 hours exclusive of
the time necessary for journey from the place of arrest to the court of the
Magistrate in the absence of a special order under Section 167 of the Code. The
Constitution of India through Article 22(2) mandates that every person who is
arrested and detained in custody shall be produced before the nearest
Magistrate within a period of 24 hours of such arrest excluding the time
necessary for journey from the place of arrest to that court and that no person
shall be detained in custody beyond that period without the authority of the
Magistrate. Thus, the Constitution of India as well as the Code of Criminal
Procedure expect that an arrested person, who has been detained in custody,
shall not be kept in detention for any unreasonable time and that the investigation
must be completed as far as possible within 24 hours. Where the investigation
of the offence for which accused has been arrested cannot be completed within
24 hours and there are grounds for believing that the accusation or information
against the accused is well- founded, the police is obliged to forward the
accused along with the case diary to the nearest Magistrate for further remand
of the accused person. The Magistrate, on the production of the accused and the
case diary, must 626 scrutinise the same carefully and consider whether the
arrest was legal and proper and whether the formalities required by law have
been complied with and then to grant further remand, if the Magistrate is so
satisfied, The law enjoins upon the investigating agency to carry out the
investigation, in a case where a person has been arrested and detained, with
utmost urgency and complete the investigation with great promptitude in the
prescribed period. Sub-section (2) of Section 167 of the Code lays down that
the Magistrate to whom the accused is forwarded may authorise his detention in
such custody, as he may think fit, for a term specified in that section. The
proviso to subsection (2) fixes the outer limit within which the investigation
must be completed and in case the same is not completed within the said
prescribed period, the accused would acquire a right to seek to be released on
bail and if he is prepared to and does furnish bail, the Magistrate shall
release him on bail and such release shall be deemed to be grant of bail under
Chapter XXXIII of the Code of Criminal Procedure. The said chapter comprises of
Sections 436 to 450 but for our purposes It is only Sections 437 and 439 of the
Code which are relevant. Both these sections empower the court to release an
accused on bail. The object behind the enactment of Section 167 of the Code was
that the detention of an accused person should not be permitted in custody
pending investigation for any unreasonably longer period. However, realising
that it may not be possible to complete the investigation in every case within
24 hours or even 15 days, as the case may be, even if the investigating agency
proceeds with utmost promptitude, Parliament introduced the proviso to Section
167(2) of the Code prescribing the outer limit within which the investigation
must be completed. Section 167 read with Section 20(4) of TADA, thus, strictly
speaking is not a provision for "grant of bail" but deals with the
maximum period during which a person accused of an offence may be kept in
custody and detention to enable the investigating agency to complete the
investigation and file the charge-sheet, if necessary, in the court. The
proviso to Section 167(2) of the Code read with Section 20(4)(b) of TADA,
therefore, creates an indefeasible right in an accused person on account of the
'default' by the investigating agency in the completion of the investigation
within the maximum period prescribed or extended, as the case may be, to seek
an order for his release on bail. It is for this reason that an order for
release on bail under proviso (a) of Section 167(2) of the Code read with
Section 20(4) of TADA is generally termed as an "order-on-default" as
it is granted on account of the default of the prosecution to complete the
investigation and file the challan within the prescribed period. As a
consequence of the amendment, an accused after the expiry of 180 days from the
date of his arrest becomes entitled to bail irrespective of the nature of the
offence with which he is charged where the prosecution falls to put up challan
against him on completion of the investigation. With the amendment of clause
(b) of sub-section (4) of Section 20 read with the proviso to sub-section (2)
of Section 167 of CrPC an indefeasible right to be enlarged on bail accrues in favour
of the accused if the police fails to complete the investigation and put up a challan
against 627 him in accordance with law under Section 173 CrPC. An obligation,
in such a case, is cast upon the court, when after the expiry of the maximum
period during which an accused could be kept in custody, to decline the police
request for further remand except in cases governed by clause (bb) of Section
20(4). There is yet another obligation also which is cast on tile court and
that is to inform the accused of his right of being released on bail and enable
him to make an application in that behalf.
(Hussainara
Khatoon case6). This legal position has been very ably stated in Aslam Babalal
Desai v. State of Maharashtra7 where speaking for the majority, Ahmadi, J.
referred
with approval to the law laid down in Rajnikant Jivanlal Patel v. Intelligence
officer, Narcotic Control Bureau, New Delhi' wherein it was held that (SCC p.
288, para 9) "The right to bail under Section 167(2) proviso (a) thereto
is absolute. It is a legislative command and not court's discretion. If the
investigating agency fails to file charge-sheet before the expiry of 90/60
days, as the case may be, the accused in custody should be released on bail.
But at that stage, merits of the case are not to be examined. Not at all. In
fact, the Magistrate has no power to remand a person beyond the stipulated
period of 90/60 days.
He
must pass an order of bail and communicate the same to the accused to furnish
the requisite bail bonds."
21.
Thus, we find that once the period for film,- the charge-sheet has expired and
either no extension under clause (bb) has been granted by the Designated Court
or the period of extension has also expired, the accused person would be
entitled to move an application for being admitted to bail under sub-section
(4) of Section 20 TADA read with Section 167 of the Code and the Designated
Court shall release him on bail, if the accused seeks to be so released and
furnishes the requisite bail. We are not impressed with the argument of the
learned counsel for the appellant that on the expiry of the period during which
investigation is required to be completed under Section 20(4) TADA read with
Section 167 of the Code, the court must release the accused on bail on its own
motion even without any application from an accused person on his offering to
furnish bail. In our opinion an accused is required to make an application if
lie wishes to be released on bail on account of the 'default' of the
investigating prosecuting agency and once such an application is made, the
court should issue a notice to the public prosecutor who may either show that
the prosecution has obtained the order for extension for completion of
investigation from the court under clause (bb) or that the challan has been
filed in the Designated Court before the expiry of the prescribed period or
even that the prescribed period has actually not expired and thus resist the
grant of bail on the alleged ground of 'default'. The issuance of notice would
avoid the possibility of an accused 6 Hussinara Khatoon v. Home Secy., State of
Bihar, (1980) 1 SCC 98: 1980 SCC (Cri) 40: AIR 1979 SC 1369 7 (1992) 4 SCC 272:
1992 SCC (Cri) 870: AIR 1993 SC 8 (1989) 3 SCC 532: 1989 SCC (Cri) 612: AIR
1990 SC 71 628 obtaining an order of bail under the 'default' clause by either
deliberately or inadvertently concealing certain facts and would avoid
multiplicity of proceedings. It would, therefore, serve the ends of justice if
both sides are heard on a petition for grant of bail on account of the
prosecution's 'default'. Similarly, when a report is submitted by the public
prosecutor to the Designated Court for grant of extension under clause (bb),
its notice should be issued to the accused before granting such an extension so
that an accused may have an opportunity to oppose the extension on all
legitimate and legal grounds available to him. It is true that neither clause
(b) nor clause (bb) of sub-section (4) of Section 20 TADA specifically provide
for the issuance of such a notice but in our opinion the issuance of such a
notice must be read into these provisions both in the interest of the accused
and the prosecution as well as for doing complete justice between the parties.
This
is a requirement of the principles of natural justice and the issuance of
notice to the accused or the public prosecutor, as the case may be, would
accord with fair play in action, which the courts have always encouraged and
even insisted upon. It would also strike a just balance between the interest of
the liberty of an accused on the one hand and the society at large through the
prosecuting agency on the other hand. There is no prohibition to the issuance
of such a notice to the accused or the public prosecutor in the scheme of the
Act and no prejudice whatsoever can be caused by the issuance of such a notice
to any party. We must as already noticed reiterate that the objection to the
grant of bail to an accused on account of the 'default' of the prosecution to
complete the investigation and file the challan within the maximum period
prescribed under clause (b) of sub-section (4) of Section 20 TADA or within the
extended period as envisaged by clause (bb) has to be limited to cases where
either the factual basis for invoking the 'default' clause is not available or
the period for completion of investigation has been extended under clause (bb)
and the like. No other condition like the gravity of the case, seriousness of
the offence or character of the offender etc. can weigh with the court at that
stage to refuse the grant of bail to an accused under sub-section (4) of
Section 20 TADA on account of the 'default' of the prosecution.
22. An
application for grant of bail under Section 20(4) has to be decided on its own
merits for the default of the prosecuting agency to file the charge-sheet
within the prescribed or the extended period for completion of the
investigation uninfluenced by the merits or the gravity of the case. The court
has no power to remand an accused to custody beyond the period prescribed by
clause (b) of Section 20(4) or extended under clause (bb) of the said section,
as the case may be, if the challan is not filed, only on the ground that the
accusation against the accused is of a serious nature or the offence is very
grave. These grounds are irrelevant for considering the grant of bail under
Section 20(4) TADA. The learned Additional Solicitor General rightly did not
subscribe to the argument of Mr Madhava Reddy (both appearing for the State of Maharashtra)
that while considering an application for release on bail under Section 20(4),
the court has also to be guided by the 629 general conditions for grant of bail
as provided by Section 20(8) TADA. Considering the ambit and scope of the two
provisions, we are of the opinion that it is totally inconceivable and
unacceptable that the considerations for grant of bail under Section 20(8)
would be applicable to and control the ,,rant of bail under Section 20(4) of
the Act.
The
two provisions operate in different and independent fields. The basis for grant
of bail under Section 20(4), as already noticed, is entirely different from the
grounds on which bail may be granted under Section 20(8) of the Act.
It
would be advantageous at this stage to notice the provisions of Section 20(8)
and (9) of the Act.
"(8)
Notwithstanding anything contained in the Code, no person accused of an offence
punishable under this Act or any rule made there under shall, if in custody, be
released on bail or on his own bond unless- (a) the Public Prosecutor has been
given an opportunity to oppose the application for such release, and (b) where
the Public Prosecutor opposes the application, the court is satisfied that
there are reasonable grounds for believing that he is not guilty of such
offence and that he is not likely to commit any offence while on bail.
(9)
The limitations on granting of bail specified in sub-section (8) are in
addition to the limitations under the Code or any other law for the time being
in force on granting of bail." As would be seen from the plain phraseology
of sub-section (8) of Section 20, it commences with a non obstante clause and
in its operation imposes a ban on release of a person accused of an offence
punishable under TADA or any rule made there under on bail unless the twin
conditions contained in clauses (a) and (b) thereof are satisfied. No bail can
be granted under Section 20(8) unless the Designated Court is satisfied after
notice to the public prosecutor that there are reasonable grounds for believing
that the accused is not guilty of such an offence and that he is not likely to
commit any offence while on bail. Sub-section (9) qualifies sub-section (8) to
the extent that the two conditions contained in clauses (a) and (b) are in
addition to the limitations prescribed under the Code of Criminal Procedure or
any other law for the time being in force relating to the grant of bail.
Strictly speaking Section 20(8) is not the source of power of the Designated
Court to grant bail but it places further limitations on the exercise of its
power to grant bail in cases under TADA, as is amply clear from the plain
language of Section 20(9). The Constitution Bench in Kartar Singh case' while
dealing with the ambit and scope of sub-sections (8) and (9) of Section 20 of
the Act quoted with approval the following observations from Usmonbhai case4:
(SCC p. 704, para 344)
"Though
there is no express provision excluding the applicability of Section 439 of the
Code similar to the one contained in Section 20(7) of the Act in relation to a
case involving the arrest of any person on an 630 accusation of having
committed an offence punishable under the Act or any rule made thereunder, but
that result must, by necessary implication, follow. It is true that the source
of power of a Designated Court to grant ball is not Section 20(8) of the Act as
it only places limitations on such power. This is made explicit by Section
20(9) which enacts that the limitations on granting of ball specified in
Section 20(8) are 'in addition to the limitations under the Code or any other
law for the time being in force'. But it does not necessarily follow that the
power of a Designated Court to ,rant bail 'is relatable to Section 439 of the
Code. It cannot be doubted that a Designated Court is 'a court other than the
High Court or the Court of Session' within the meaning of Section 437 of the
Code. The exercise of the power to grant bail by a Designated Court is not only
subject to the limitations contained therein, but is also subject to the
limitations placed by Section 20(8) of the Act." and went on to add: (SCC
p. 704, para 345) "Reverting to Section 20(8), if either of the two
conditions mentioned therein is not satisfied, the ban operates and the accused
person cannot be released on ball but of course it is subject to Section 167(2)
as modified by Section 20(4) of the TADA Act in relation to a case under the
provisions of TADA." Thus, the ambit and scope of Section 20(8) of TADA is
no longer res integra and from the above discussion It follows that both the
provisions i.e. Section 20(4) and 20(8) of TADA operate in different situations
and are controlled and guided by different considerations.
23. We
may at this stage, also on a plain reading of clause (bb) of sub-section (4) of
Section 20, point out that the Legislature has provided for seeking extension
of time for completion of investigation on a report of the public prosecutor.
The Legislature did not purposely leave it to an investigating officer to make
an application for seeking extension of time from the court. This provision is In
tune with the legislative intent to have the investigations completed
expeditiously and not to allow an accused to be kept in continued detention
during unnecessary prolonged investigation at the whims of the police. The
Legislature expects that the investigation must be completed with utmost
promptitude but where it becomes necessary to seek some more time for
completion of the investigation, the investigating agency must submit itself to
the scrutiny of the public prosecutor in the first instance and satisfy him
about the progress of the investigation and furnish reasons for seeking further
custody of an accused. A public prosecutor is an important officer of the State
Government and is appointed by the State under the Code of Criminal Procedure.
He is
not a part of the investigating agency. He is an independent statutory
authority. The public prosecutor is expected to independently apply his mind to
the request of the investigating agency before Submitting a report to the court
for extension of time with a view to enable the investigating agency to
complete the investigation. He is not merely a post office or a forwarding
agency. A public prosecutor may or 631 may not agree with the reasons given by
the investigating officer for seeking extension of time and may find that the
investigation had not progressed in the proper manner or that there has been
unnecessary, deliberate or avoidable delay in completing the investigation. In
that event, he may not submit any report to the court under clause (bb) to seek
extension of time. Thus, for seeking extension of time under clause (bb), the
public prosecutor after an independent application of his mind to the request
of the investigating agency is required to make a report to the Designated
Court indicating therein the progress of the investigation and disclosing
justification for keeping the accused in further custody to enable the
investigating agency to complete the investigation. The public prosecutor may
attach the request of the investigating officer along with his request or
application and report, but his report, as envisaged under clause (bb), must
disclose on the face of it that he has applied his mind and was satisfied with
the progress of the investigation and considered grant of further time to
complete the investigation necessary. The use of the expression "on the
report of the public prosecutor indicating the progress of the investigation
and the specific reasons for the detention of the accused beyond the said
period" as occurring in clause (bb) in sub-section (2) of Section 167 as
amended by Section 20(4) are important and indicative of the legislative intent
not to keep an accused in custody unreasonably and to grant extension only on
the report of the public prosecutor. The report of the public prosecutor,
therefore, is not merely a formality but a very vital report, because the
consequence of its acceptance affects the liberty of an accused and it must,
therefore, strictly comply with the requirements as contained in clause (bb).
The request of an investigating officer for extension of time is no substitute
for the report of the public prosecutor. Where either no report as is envisaged
by clause (bb) is filed or the report filed by the public prosecutor is not
accepted by the Designated Court, since the grant of extension of time under
clause (bb) is neither a formality nor automatic, the necessary corollary would
be that an accused would be entitled to seek bail and the court 'shall' release
hi on bail if he furnishes bail as required by the Designated Court. It is not
merely the question of form in which the request for extension under clause
(bb) is made but one of substance.
The
contents of the report to be submitted by the public prosecutor, after proper
application of his mind, are designed to assist the Designated Court to
independently decide whether or not extension should be granted in a given
case. Keeping in view the consequences of the grant of extension i.e. keeping
an accused in further custody, the Designated Court must be satisfied for the Justification,
from the report of the public prosecutor, to grant extension of time to
complete the investigation. Where the Designated Court declines to grant such
an extension, the right to be released on bail on account of the 'default' of
the prosecution becomes indefeasible and cannot be defeated by reasons other
than those contemplated by sub-section (4) of Section 20 as discussed in the
earlier part of this judgment. We are unable to agree with Mr Madhava Reddy or
the Additional Solicitor General Mr Tulsi that even if the public 632
prosecutor 'presents' the request of the investigating officer to the court or
'forwards' the request of the investigating officer to the court, it should be
construed to be the report of the public prosecutor. There is no scope for such
a construction when we are dealing with the liberty of a citizen. The courts
are expected to zealously safeguard his liberty. Clause (bb) has to be read and
interpreted on its plain language without addition or substitution of any
expression in it. We have already dealt with the importance of the report of
the public prosecutor and emphasised that he is neither a 'post office' of the
investigating agency nor its 'forwarding agency' but is charged with a
statutory duty. He must apply his mind to the facts and circumstances of the
case and his report must disclose on the face of it that he had applied his
mind to the twin conditions contained in clause (bb) of sub-section (4) of
Section 20. Since the law requires him to submit the report as envisaged by the
section, he must act in the manner as provided by the section and in no other
manner. A Designated
Court which overlooks
and ignores the requirements of a valid report falls in the performance of one
of its essential duties and renders its order under clause (bb) vulnerable.
Whether the public prosecutor labels his report as a report or as an
application for extension, would not be of much consequence so long as it
demonstrates on the face of it that he has applied his mind and is satisfied with
the progress of the investigation and the genuineness of the reasons for grant
of extension to keep an accused in further custody as envisaged by clause (bb)
(supra). Even the mere reproduction of the application or request of the
investigating officer by the public prosecutor in his report, without
demonstration of the application of his mind and recording his own
satisfaction, would not render his report as the one envisaged by clause (bb)
and it would not be a proper report to seek extension of time. In the absence
of an appropriate report the Designated Court would have no jurisdiction to
deny to an accused his Indefeasible right to be released on bail on account of
the default of the prosecution to file the challan within the prescribed time
if an accused seeks and is prepared to furnish the bail bonds as directed by
the court. Moreover, no extension can be granted to keep an accused in custody
beyond the prescribed period except to enable the investigation to be completed
and as already stated before any extension is granted under clause (bb), the
accused must be put on notice and permitted to have his say so as to be able to
object to the grant of extension.
43 of
1993 would apply to the pending cases i.e. the cases which were pending
investigation on the date when the amendment came into force and in which the
charge-sheet or challan had not been filed till 22-5-1993.
25. We
have already noticed that clause (b) of sub-section (4) of Section 20 was
amended by the Amendment Act No. 43 of 1993 with effect from 22-5-1993. Besides
reducing the maximum period during which an accused under TADA Could be kept in
custody pending investigation from one year to 180 days, the Amendment Act also
introduced clause (bb) to sub- section (4) of Section 20 enabling the
prosecution to seek extension of time for 633 completion of the investigation.
Does the Amendment Act No. 43 of 1993 have retrospective operation and does the
amendment apply to the cases which were pending investigation on the date when
the Amendment Act came into force? There may be cases where on 22-5-1993 the
period of 180 days had already expired but the period of one year was not yet
over. In such a case, the argument of learned counsel for the appellant is that
the Act operates retrospectively and applies to pending cases and therefore the
accused should be forthwith released on bail if he is willing to be so released
and is prepared to furnish the bail bonds as directed by the court, an argument
which is seriously contested by the respondents.
26. The
Designated Court has held that the amendment would operate retrospectively and
would apply to the pending cases in which investigation was not complete on the
date on which the Amendment Act came into force and the challan had not till
then been filed in the court. From the law settled by this Court in various
cases the illustrative though not exhaustive principles which emerge with
regard to the ambit and scope of an Amending Act and its retrospective
operation may be culled out as follows:
(i) A
statute which affects substantive rights is presumed to be prospective in
operation unless made retrospective, either expressly or by necessary
intendment, whereas a statute which merely affects procedure, unless such a
construction is textually impossible, is presumed to be retrospective in its
application, should not be given an extended meaning and should be strictly
confined to its clearly defined limits.
(ii)
Law relating to forum and limitation is procedural in nature, whereas law
relating to right of action and right of appeal even though remedial is
substantive in nature.
(iii)
Every litigant has a vested right in substantive law but no such right exists
in procedural law.
(iv) A
procedural statute should not generally speaking be applied retrospectively
where the result would be to create new disabilities or obligations or to
impose new duties in respect of transactions already accomplished.
(v) A
statute which not only changes the procedure but also creates new rights and
liabilities shall be construed to be prospective in operation, unless otherwise
provided, either expressly or by necessary implication."
27. In
fairness to the learned Additional Solicitor General Mr Tulsi, it may be stated
that he did not controvert the legal position (both in his oral submissions and
written arguments) that Amendment Act 43 of 1993 regulating the period of
compulsory detention and the procedure for grant of bail, being procedural in
nature, would operate retrospectively. We need not, therefore, detain ourselves
to further examine the question of retrospective operation of the Amendment
Act. On the basis of the submissions made by learned counsel for the parties,
we uphold the finding of the Designated 634 Court, for the reasons recorded by
it and those noticed by us above that the Amendment of 1993 would apply to the
cases which were pending investigation on 22-5-1993 and in which the challan
had not till then been filed in court.
28.The
learned Additional Solicitor General, however, submitted that since the Amendment
Act had introduced clauses (b) and (bb) to sub-section (4) of Section 20 also,
it would be appropriate and desirable that both the clauses (b) and (bb) must
be considered together and treated on a par insofar as the retrospective
operation is concerned meaning thereby that clause (bb) would also be available
to be invoked where the challan had not been filed till the amendment came into
force. Mr Tulsi argued that since the modification brought about by the
Amending Act curtailed the period granted to the investigating agency to
complete the investigation, the Legislature had designedly introduced clause
(bb) to enable the public prosecutor to make a report to the court when the
investigation was still in progress indicating progress of the investigation
and seek extension of the time beyond 180 days by assigning specific reasons
for seeking extension and as such it would not be proper to treat clause (b)
only as applicable to the pending cases and not clause (bb). We find substance
in the submission of the learned Additional Solicitor General. Both the clauses
have to be harmonised and the legislative intent given a full play. Since both
the clauses (b) and (bb) as introduced by the Amendment Act fall within the
realm of procedural law, these would be applicable to pending cases since there
is no vested right in an accused in the procedural law. The object which
influenced Parliament to introduce clause (bb) after curtailing the period of
compulsory detention in custody to 180 days from one year by amendment of
clause (b) clearly appears to be that if the investigating agency, which
originally, had one year's time allowed to it to complete the investigation,
could not complete the investigation when the period was suddenly curtailed to
180 days, it should not be put to a disadvantage for no fault of its and should
be in a position to seek extension of time for completing the investigation
beyond the period of 180 days. However, to prevent an abuse of clause (bb) and
to avoid seeking of extension of time in a routine manner, the Legislature
provided a safeguard in clause (bb) itself, namely, that extension in such
cases could be granted by the court provided it is satisfied from the report of
the public prosecutor that there are sufficient grounds for grant of such
extension. In case clause (b) only and not clause (bb) is held to be applicable
to pending cases as was suggested by Mr Khanwilkar, it would render clause (bb)
almost otiose insofar as pending cases are concerned and defeat the legislative
intent and further put the prosecution to an unfair disadvantage. The Amendment
Act was not enacted with the object of giving benefit to an accused and
subjecting the prosecuting agency to an unfair disadvantage and leaving it
almost with no remedy for seeking further custody of an accused. We are, thus,
of the opinion that Amendment Act 43 insofar as it modifies the period
prescribed in clause (b) and introduces clause (bb) to sub-section (4) of
Section 20 would apply retrospectively and 635 apply to pending cases as well.
We are unable to persuade ourselves to agree with Mr Khanwilkar that clause (b)
only and not clause (bb) of sub-section (4) of Section 20 should be held to
have retrospective operation. The acceptance of such an argument would result
in the creating of an anomalous situation and defeat the very object with which
clause (bb) was introduced after the period of compulsory detention was
curtailed under clause (b) of Section 20(4) of the Act.
29. As
a result of our above discussion it follows that Amendment Act 43 of 1993 is
retrospective in operation and both clauses (b) and (bb) of subsection (4) of
Section 20 of TADA apply to the cases which were pending investigation on the
date when the amendment came into force with effect from 22-5-1993 and in which
the challan had not been filed till then.
30. In
conclusion, we may (even at the cost of repetition) say that an accused person
seeking bail under Section 20(4) has to make an application to the court for
grant of bail on grounds of 'default' of the prosecution and the court shall
release the accused on bail after notice to the public prosecutor uninfluenced
by the gravity of the offence or the merits of the prosecution case since
Section 20(8) does not control the grant of bail under Section 20(4) of TADA
and both the provisions operate in separate and independent fields. It is,
however, permissible for the public prosecutor to resist the grant of bail by
seeking an extension under clause (bb) by filing a report for the purpose
before the court. However, no extension shall be ,,ranted by the court without
notice to an accused to have his say regarding the prayer for grant of
extension under clause (bb). In this view of the matter, it is immaterial
whether the application for bail on ground of 'default' under Section 20(4) is
filed first or the report as envisaged by clause (bb) is filed by the public
prosecutor first so ]on- as both are considered while -ranting or refusing
bail. If the period prescribed by clause (b) of Section 20(4) has expired and
the court does not grant an extension on the report of the public prosecutor
made under clause (bb), the court shall release the accused on bail as it would
be an indefeasible right of the accused to be so released. Even where the court
grants an extension under clause (bb) but the charge-sheet is not filed within
the extended period, the court shall have no option but to release the accused
on bail if he seeks it and is prepared to furnish the bail as directed by the
court. Moreover, no extension under clause (bb) can be granted by the
Designated Court except on a report of the public prosecutor nor can extension
be granted for reasons other than those specifically contained in clause (bb)
which must be strictly construed.
31.
Having answered the questions posed by us in the opening part of the judgment,
we shall now take up individual cases.
Criminal
Appeal Nos. 732-35 of 1993
32.
These appeals are directed against the common judgment and order of the
Designated Court dated 31-7-1993 and though have been preferred by S/Shri Hitendra
Vishnu Thakur, Raja Maruti Jadhav, Dilip Shankar Waghcoude and Dhyaneshwar Bhaskar
Patil, the same have been pressed 636 and argued on behalf of Hitendra Vishnu Thakur
only by Mr N.T. Vanamalai and Mr Swaraj Kaushal, learned Senior Advocates. A
brief reference to the facts of the case at this stage is desirable.
33. On
9-10-1989 one Suresh Narsinh Dubey, a Real Estate Developer, was shot dead at
about 10.30 a.m. at Nalasopara Railway Station in District Thane in the
presence of his brother-in-law A.S. Tripathi who is the eyewitness. The brother
of the deceased, Shri Shyam Sunder Dubey, on receipt of the information went to
Palghar Police Station and a first information report was lodged resulting in
the registration of a case CR No. 90 of 1989. During the investigation, Patrick
Frances Truskar and Ananda Ramachandra Patil were arrested in connection with
the said case on 20-10-1989. A charge-sheet was filed against them in the Court
of Sessions on 8-7-1990. Sessions Case No. 88 of 1991 is pending disposal in
that connection.
34. In
February 1992, the DIG of Police (Maharashtra Railway Police) visited Palghar
Police Station and after going through the record of the case was of the
opinion that the investigation had not been properly conducted in CR No. 90 of
1989 and he, therefore, summoned the complainant Shyam Sunder Dubey.
Subsequently, however, the wife of the deceased met the DIG of Police and
presented an application dated 18-5-1992 executed by Shyam Sunder Dubey, the
complainant. The DIG of Police on receipt of the application ordered
reinvestigation. An application was also addressed to the Sessions Judge, Thane
under Section 173(8) CrPC by the prosecuting agency seeking permission for
reinvestigation after detailing the reasons therein, which was granted by the
court. During the reinvestigation, some more accused persons were arrested in
the said case and remanded to judicial custody on various days. Petitioner 1 Hitendra
Vishnu Thakur and two others read a news item in some local newspaper
indicating that they were likely to be arrested in respect of the murder of the
deceased Suresh Narsinh Dubey in CR No. 90 of 1989 and therefore they
approached the Bombay High Court for grant of anticipatory ball on 25-9-1992.
After notice to the Public Prosecutor, the Bombay High Court granted interim
anticipatory ball to the applicants on 29-9-1992. On 30-9-1992, the prosecution
filed an application in the High Court stating that since in the instant case
provisions of TADA were applicable the accused could not be admitted to
anticipatory bail because Section 438 CrPC was excluded in its application to
offences under TADA. The High Court consequently dismissed the anticipatory
bail application of Hitendra Vishnu Thakur and others but kept effective the
order of interim anticipatory bail for a period of one week to enable the
applicants to take recourse to further proceedings. On 1-10-1992, petitioner 1
and others filed Writ Petition No. 1261 of 1992 in the High Court of Bombay for
a declaration that for the reasons stated in the writ petition the provisions
of TADA were not attracted to the facts of the case. The writ petition was,
however, dismissed on 23-10-1992 by the High Court with the observation that
the Designated Court may go into the question of the applicability of the
provisions of TADA independently at the appropriate 637 stage. Not satisfied
with the order of the High Court of Bombay dated 23-10-1992 petitioner 1 and
others filed Special Leave Petition (Crl.) No. 2736 of 1992 against the said
order of the Bombay High Court. On 17-11-1992 the Special Leave Petition (Crl.)
No. 2736 of 1992 was dismissed by this Court. It was, thereafter, that on
5-12-1992 petitioner 1 Hitendra Vishnu Thakur along with one other co- accused
surrendered before the Director General of Police, Maharashtra. On 4-1-1993 he
was remanded to judicial custody. An application, being TMA No. 62 of 1992, for
grant of bail under Section 20(8) of TADA was dismissed by the Designated Court
on 17-7-1993. Another application, TMA No. 76 of 1992, filed by the petitioner
on 29-9-1992 urging that the provisions of TADA were not attracted and that the
case be not tried by the Designated Court was also dismissed on 2-9-1993
adopting the reasoning given in the order dated 17-7-1993 in TMA No. 62 of
1992. While the matters rested thus, Parliament enacted Amendment Act No. 43 of
1993 which came into force on 22-5-1993. Among the other amendments made to
TADA Section 20(4)(b) was amended by which the time for filing the charge-sheet
was reduced from one year to 180 days. The Amendment Act also introduced a new
provision in the form of clause (bb) providing for grant of extension of time
for completion of investigation and filing of challan on a report of the public
prosecutor indicating the progress of investigation and the specific reasons
for detention by the Designated Court, subject however to the maximum period of
compulsory detention of one year.
35. On
6-7-1993 the petitioner Hitendra Vishnu Thakur
filed an application for grant of bail under Section 20(4) of the Act on the
ground that 180 days had expired on 4-6-1993 but no charge-sheet/challan had
been filed. On 12-7-1993 the Public Prosecutor presented a
request of the investigating officer dated 29-6-1993 to the Designated Court seeking extension of time to
complete the investigation and objections were also filed to the application
for bail filed by Hitendra Vishnu Thakur under Section 20(4) of the Act by the
Public Prosecutor. The bail application was dismissed by the Designated Court on 31-7-1993 and the prosecution was granted extension of time till 30-8-1993 to file the challan/charge-sheet treating the
application of the investigating officer as a report of the Public Prosecutor.
M/s Vanamalai
and Swaraj Kaushal, Senior Advocates, have assailed the order dated 31-7-1993
by urging that the extension to complete the investigation has been granted
ignoring the requirements of law as contemplated by clause (bb) and that the
prayer for bail under Section 20(4) has been rejected on extraneous
considerations. Learned counsel submitted that once it is found that extension
under clause (bb) was erroneously granted, the right to be released on bail
under Section 20(4) of TADA could not be defeated on any account. Learned counsel
for the respondent on the other hand submitted that the Designated Court
rightly rejected the application for grant of bail sought under Section 20(4)
of TADA by taking into consideration the objections filed by the public
prosecutor and the application of the investigating officer seeking extension
after detailing the 638 progress of the investigation and furnishing specific
reasons for seeking extension of time.
36.
The application for extension which was treated as a report of the Public
Prosecutor by the Designated
Court and on which
extension of time for completion of investigation and filing of charge-sheet
was granted has been filed by the appellant as an Annexure P-5 which is
available at page 110 of the paper-book and reads thus :
"Out
Ward No. 90/89-P- 1 993 Sub-Divisional Police Officer, Western Railway,
Church-ate, Bombay.
Date June 29, 1993 To, Hon'ble Designated Judge,
Designated Court, Pune.
Sub :
Regarding progress of investigation and request for extension of period to file
the charge-sheet under CR No. 90 of 1989 under Sections 302, 338, 114, 120(b),
147, 148, 149 of IPC and under Sections 3/25(1)(c) of Indian Arms Act and under
Section 3 of TADA registered at Palghar Police Railway Station.
Respected
Sir, With regard to the above, I have to state that with permission of District
and Sessions Judge of Thane the investigation of the above case is continued
from 23-9-1992. In the present case 20 accused all
named out of these 12 accused are arrested at several places from 23-9-1992 and all are in judicial custody. We have collected
sufficient evidence to enable to file case in the court against the arrested
accused. According to Section 20 of TADA Act , before filing the case 'In
Designated Court it is necessary to get the sanction of Director General of
Police, Maharashtra State, Bombay for which the detailed report with papers
have been sent.
Further
it is found that four police officers are involved in this case and to file the
case against them a separate report is being sent to Maharashtra Government for
the sanction.
We are
ready to file the case as soon as we get the above mentioned both permission.
Therefore
we request you to extend the period for two months for investigation.
According
to the TADA Act it is necessary to file the chargesheet against the arrested
accused within one year to the Designated Court.
But as per Indian Government Order No. 6/8/93, Legal Cell, Government of India,
Ministry of Home Affairs, New Delhi,
dated 19- 5-1993, the TADA Act has been amended. As
per amended Act it is necessary to file the charge-sheet within 180 days
against the 639 arrested accused. It is not mentioned in the amendment the date
from which it comes in force.
Received
on 12-7-1993 Respectfully submitted Sd/- Date: 29-6-1993 Judge. Sd/- (M.V. Deshmukh) Sub-Divisional Police
Officer D.R. Churchgate, Bombay.
Submitted
to Shri Vijay Sawant, Specially appointed Government Pleader, Designated Court, Pune."
37. As
would be seen from the application itself, it is not a report of the Public Prosecutor
but an application filed by the Sub-Divisional Police Officer and is addressed
to the Designated Judge of the Designated Court.
Even if it be assumed from the endorsement at the bottom of the letter which
reads thus :
"Submitted
to Shri Vijay Sawant, Specially appointed Government Pleader, Designated Court, Pune." that the application
was submitted to the Public Prosecutor and not directly to the Designated Court, in vain have we searched for any
material on the record to show that the Public Prosecutor filed any report
along with this application before the Designated Court. In fact learned counsel for the respondents admitted that
besides the application, extracted above, no other report was filed by the
Public Prosecutor to seek extension of time for completion of the investigation
as envisaged by clause (bb) of Section 20(4) of TADA though the Public
Prosecutor had filed his objections to the bail application filed under Section
20(4) of TADA read with Section 167(2) of the Code.
The Designated Court treated the application of the
investigating officer as a report from the Public Prosecutor as is obvious from
the following observations of the Designated Court :
"It
is pertinent to note that in these applications the Investigating officer had forwarded
the report indicating the progress of the investigation on 29-6-1993 and in the said progress report he prayed for
extension of two months' time for submitting the charge- sheet on the ground
that the prosecution wants to seek sanction of the Inspector General of Police.
It may be noted that as per the Amendment Act, 1993, Section 20-A has been
added and as per this provision, the previous sanction of the Inspector General
of Police would be necessary. Similarly, it is mentioned in the said report that
in this matter four police officers have also been involved and prior sanction
of the Government 640 `` for prosecuting the government servants as per the
provisions of Section 197 CrPC (is required). Thus, the investigating officer
wants time for making compliance of law.
Taking
into consideration very serious and complicated nature of the offence the
prayer for extension of two months' time from 29-6- 1993 appears reasonable for
seeking sanction to file charge-sheet. It is contended on behalf of the
applicant-accused that a report of the Public Prosecutor is necessary. It may
be noted that the Public Prosecutor while giving his reply has referred to this
report of the investigating officer and prayed for extension of time. The
Public Prosecutor is also required to obtain the report from the investigating
officer and on the basis of that report the Public Prosecutor files the reply
in the court. The reply of the Public Prosecutor, read with the report dated
29-6- 1993 of the investigating officer, is sufficient compliance of the report
contemplated under the proviso (bb) indicating the progress of the
investigation. Therefore the extension will have to be granted to the
investigating machinery for two months from 29-6-1993.
In the
result the bail cannot be granted." (emphasis ours)
38. We
are unable to persuade ourselves to accept the view of the Designated Court that since the application of the
investigating officer was supported by the Public Prosecutor, the request of
the investigating agency could be treated as the report of the Public
Prosecutor when read with the objections filed by the Public Prosecutor to the
bail application. The observations of the Designated Court show that the said court lost sight of the importance of
the report and treated the whole thing in a rather casual manner. The
application of the investigating officer dated 29-6-1993, reproduced above, can
by no stretch of imagination be construed as a report of the Public Prosecutor
as envisaged by Section 20(4)(bb) of TADA and therefore no extension under
clause (bb) could have been granted by the Designated Court without the receipt
of the report of the Public Prosecutor. That apart, even if we ignore the
discrepancy in the various dates regarding the presentation of the application
in the court it appears from a bare perusal of the application of the
investigating officer that the Public Prosecutor did not even endorse the
application with any comments to indicate as to whether or not he was agreeing
with the statements contained in the application. The Public Prosecutor
obviously did not apply his mind to the request of the investigating agency and
merely acted as its 'post office'. The Designated Court was deprived of the opportunity of scrutinising the report
of the Public Prosecutor before granting extension. We need not, therefore,
even comment upon the reasons given by the investigating officer in the
application to test their correctness or otherwise because we are firmly of the
view that the said letter/application of the investigating officer cannot be
construed or treated as a substitute for the report of the Public Prosecutor as
contemplated by clause (bb) of Section 20(4) of TADA. Faced with this
situation, learned counsel for the respondents submitted that the objections
filed by the Public Prosecutor to the bail application read with the 641
application of the investigating officer may be held to be substantial
compliance with the requirements of clause (bb).
We
cannot agree.
39.
The application filed by the appellant Hitendra Vishnu Thakur for his release
on bail under Section 20(4) of the Act reads as follows :
"1.
That the accused above named was arrested on 5-12-1992 in the above referred Crime Register No. (90 of 1993). The
accused is now in Magistrate's custody. The charge-sheet against accused has
not been filed in this case till date in spite of the fact that 180 days have
elapsed since his arrest.
2. The
Terrorist and Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act was amended on 22-5-1993 vide which period allowed for the investigating
agency for filing of the charge-sheet has been amended to one hundred and
eighty days.
3. The
accused prays that he be released on bail for the following amongst other
grounds.
GROUNDS
1.
That the investigating agency has not filed the charge-sheet within the
stipulated period of 180 days.
2.
That the Public Prosecutor or the investigating agency has not filed till date
an application or report before this Hon'ble Court indicating the progress of
the investigation and specific reasons for the detention of the accused beyond
the period of 180 days and further they have not obtained an order from this Hon'ble
Court to extend the said period of detention beyond 180 days.
3. In
view of the above the accused as of right is entitled to be released on bail.
4. The
accused is ready and Willing to furnish bail as may be ordered by this Hon'ble Court.
It is
therefore prayed that the applicant- accused be released on bail.
Date :
6-7-1993 Sd/- (Advocate for accused)"
The Public Prosecutor filed his objections to the above application and in the
objections it was inter alia stated :
"4.
The concerned investigating officer on 29-6-1993 had forwarded his report to the Hon'ble Court relating to the progress of the
investigation. He had also pointed out that the steps were taken for obtaining
sanction from Director General of Police. Under these circumstances averments
in para 2 turned up to be false and misleading.
6.
Without prejudice to the above contention it is submitted that the investigation
is not completed as yet. There are serious charges of murder, goondaism, land
grabbing etc. against the accused. The accused, it is apprehended, are having
complicity in the course of 642 investigation. The investigating agency has
seized pistols and other, lethal firearms.
The
report from the Ballistic Expert is also obtained indicating the link between
the crime and its participators.
10.
(a) From the record there appears prima facie evidence to show that the
applicant is a party to the conspiracy and he knowingly facilitated the
commission of the terrorist act or an act preparatory to a terrorist act.
Considering
the facts and circumstances and the material on record, there are reasonable
grounds for believing that the applicant- accused is guilty of the offence
under the TADA Act.
10. (e)
There is evidence to show that the applicant has also indulged in land grabbing
and witnesses have stated during the investigation about the nefarious
activities of the applicant and his gangsters pointing out that the applicant
was working for the criminal conspiracy hatched at the Thakur's criminal
empire.
10.
(k) The broad daylight murder of the builder Suresh Dubey on a railway platform
was a part of criminal conspiracy by the applicant's gang to spread terror among
the people and indicate that those who oppose, they will have to pay the
penalty in one form or the other, even face total elimination in the process.
In short the intention will be to strike terror and the killing will be to
achieve that object.
11.
The prosecution submits considering the facts and circumstances and the
material on record, under these circumstances it cannot be said that the
applicant will not abscond, if released on bail. On the other hand, his close
relatives Bhai Thakur, Deepak Thakur, Bhaskar Thakur are proclaimed offenders
and they have successfully evaded arrest so far and, therefore, it is quite
possible that this applicant, if released on bail, will contac t them and
create hindrance in the smooth going investigation. The prosecution further
states that the release of these top conspirators at this crucial juncture will
cause irreparable damage in proper conduct of investigation in the cases
involving them and the kind of clout they enjoy sufficient for them to muzzle
out any note of dissent and even go to the extent of trying to damage evidence
against them as they had done in the past. The prosecution submits that for
unfolding the crime in question, the prosecution pleads to the Hon'ble Court not to grant bail to the conspirators
involved in this crime."
40.
From the perusal of the objections of the Public Prosecutor, extracted above,
it transpires that the application of the investigating officer was submitted
direct to the Designated Court by the investigating officer (see para 4) and
not by the Public Prosecutor and the prayer for release on bail of the
applicant Hitendra Vishnu Thakur under Section 20(4) was opposed 643 mainly on
grounds which are relevant under Section 20(8) of TADA and not under Section
20(4) of the Act. The grounds on which bail may be denied under Section 20(8)
of TADA are irrelevant for the consideration of the prayer for release on bail
on account of the 'default' of the prosecution under Section 20(4) of TADA.
41.
From the above discussion and the admitted fact situation (date of arrest and
period for completion of investigation and not filing of challan within the
prescribed period not being in dispute), in the case of Hitendra Vishnu Thakur,
we find that the extension of custody under clause (bb) was erroneously granted
by an improper exercise of the jurisdiction by the Designated Court by placing
an incorrect interpretation on the requirements as contemplated by clause (bb)
by treating the application of the investigating officer read with his objections
to the bail application as a report of the Public Prosecutor though without
effecting the validity of further investigation. In the absence of grant of
valid extension of custody to complete the investigation and file the challan, Hitendra
Vishnu Thakur had acquired an indefeasible and absolute right to be released on
bail as per the provisions of Section 20(4) of the Act, since the accused had
offered to be released on bail on such terms as the Designated Court may
prescribe. The Designated Court was, therefore, under an obligation to admit
and release the appellant on bail under Section 20(4) of TADA read with Section
167(2) CrPC on the merits of the application under Section 20(4) itself
uninfluenced by any other considerations.
42.
From the aforesaid discussion it follows that the order of the Designated Court
granting extension of time for completion of investigation to the investigating
agency to file the challan and therefore authorising his detention beyond the
prescribed period of compulsory custody in the case of appellant Hitendra
Vishnu Thakur and the refusal of bail to him under Section 20(4) of the Act on
extraneous considerations cannot be sustained and we, consequently, accept the
appeal of Hitendra Vishnu Thakur to that extent and set aside the order of the
Designated Court refusing to grant bail to him under Section 20(4) of the Act.
We further direct that Hitendra Vishnu Thakur be released on bail on his
furnishing bail bonds in the sum of Rs 30,000 with two sureties of the like
amount to the satisfaction of the Designated Court subject, however, to the
following conditions :
(1)
That appellant, (Hitendra Vishnu Thakur), shall before being released on bail
furnish the correct and complete address of the place where he would be residing
within the jurisdiction of the Designated Court.
(2)
That the appellant shall report at the police station nearest to the place of
his residence every week on Mondays; and (3) The appellant shall not leave the
place of his residence and move out of the jurisdiction of the Designated Court
without seeking permission from the Designated Court and informing the police
station concerned about the same.
644
43. We
wish, however, to clarify that since we have directed the release of the
appellant on account of the default of the prosecution to complete the
investigation and file the challan within the prescribed time as required by
Section 20(4) of TADA, our reference to the facts and circumstances of the case
and the discussion, should be considered only as relevant for that purpose and
nothing said by us expressly or by implication, should be construed as any
expression of opinion on the merits of the case.
Criminal
Appeal No. 738 of 1993
44.
Since, bail has been granted to the appellant in Criminal Appeal Nos. 732-735
of 1993, we grant the prayer of Mr Kaushal and dismiss Criminal Appeal No. 738
of 1993 as not pressed at this stage, without expressing any opinion on merits.
Special
Leave Petition (Crl.) No.2800 of 45. Heard.
46.
Leave granted.
47.
This appeal is preferred against the order of the Designated Court, Pune dated
2-9-1993.
48.
This appeal, by special leave, is also filed by Hitendra Vishnu Thakur.
49.
The appellant filed an application under Section 18 of TADA, being TMA No. 76
of 1992, asserting that the offence in CR No. 90 of 1989 is not covered by the
provisions of TADA and therefore the said case needs to be transferred to a
regular court for trial. The learned Designated Court by its order dated
2-9-1993, rejected the application holding that "there are reasonable
grounds to believe that the accused has committed the offences under the
provisions of the Terrorist and Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act, 1987.
Consequently, the Designated Court, Pune has the exclusive jurisdiction to try
the offences under the TADA Act and, therefore, the case against the applicant
cannot be transferred to a regular court under Section 18 of the TADA
Act." This order has been put in issue in this appeal.
50.
While dealing with Criminal Appeal Nos. 732-735 of 1993, we have adverted to
the brief facts of the case (CR No. 90 of 1989). In its order dated 17-7-1993,
in Criminal Misc. Application No. 62 of 1992, the Designated Court has dealt
with some of the statements of the witnesses recorded during the investigation.
Since the investigation was not complete and extension had been granted to the
investigating agency to further investigate and submit the challan within the
extended period, it is obvious that the investigating agency may have recorded
some more evidence in the case after 17-7-1993. At the time when TMA No. 76 of
1992 was filed the investigation in the case obviously was going on and it
would have been premature for the Designated Court, without scrutiny of the
entire material collected during the investigation, to come to any firm
conclusion that the case was not triable by the Designated Court and was
required to be tried by the regular court. Some of the statements of the
witnesses recorded during 645 the investigation, as referred to in the order of
the Designated Court, do indicate that some of the witnesses have deposed to
the activities of the appellant and others which could be construed as offences
triable under TADA. It was in this fact situation that the Designated Court
rejected the application filed by the appellant under Section 18 of the Act
holding that there were reasonable grounds to believe that an offence under the
provisions of TADA had been committed. In the facts and circumstances of the
case the view expressed by the Designated Court on 2-9- 1993 in TMA No. 76 of
1992, when the investigation itself was also not complete, read with the
evidence adverted to in its order dated 17-7-1993 cannot be said to be
unreasonable much less perverse. It is also relevant at this stage to refer to
the reply affidavit filed by Shri M.W. Deshmukh, the investigating officer, in
reply to Criminal Writ Petition No. 1261 of 1992, which had been filed by the
appellant stating that the provisions of TADA were not attracted to the facts
and circumstances of the case (CR No. 90 of 1989). In para 4 of the said
affidavit the investigating officer stated "4. 1 say and submit that the
statements recorded after the further investigation by way of reinvestigation
of the case itself bring the case of the petitioner within the meaning of
Section 3 of TADA. Apart from the relations of the deceased, the statements
also have been recorded of the eyewitnesses who had seen the actual assault
which also authenticates that at the time of incident, people had ran helter-skelter
in order to save their lives but one passer-by had sustained bullet injury on
his person i.e. on the left side of the chest by inges (sic). It is further
pertinent to note that at the relevant time, Platform No. 2 of Nalasopara
Railway Station was crowded and there were about more than one thousand people
waiting for the arrival of the train and at which time, associates of the
petitioners arrived and fired at random. I say and submit that this act of the
associates of the petitioners was pursuant to the conspiracy hatched by and
between them and the facts of conspiracy only came on surface after the
commencement of further investigation by way of reinvestigation. The statement
(of witnesses) relied upon by the investigation required to be maintained
secrecy as they apprehend danger to their lives if their names are disclosed to
the petitioners or their associates. 1, therefore, crave leave to refer to and
rely upon the statements hitherto recorded from the time of commencement of
further investigations by way of reinvestigation at the time of hearing of this
petition."
51.
The SLP against the dismissal of the writ petition was dismissed by this Court.
Moreover, on 23-11-1993 while disposing of SLP Nos. 1643-46 of 1993 (Batch)
titled Hitendra Vishnu Thakur & Ors. v. State of Maharashtra & Ors.,
this Court issued directions to the Designated Court to frame the charges on or
before 13-12-1993 and expedite the trial recording therein the undertaking of
counsel for the parties that they would not seek any adjournment on any account
thereafter. Thus, in view of the circumstances referred to above and the facts
adverted to in the order of the 646 Designated Court, no fault can be found
with the order of the Designated Court rejecting the application of the
appellant under Section 18 of the Act.
52. We
would, however, not like to express any opinion on the merits of the case at
this stage because the entire evidence had not been collected much less scrutinised
and analysed by the investigating agency or the Designated Court when the
application under Section 18 of TADA was filed and disposed of by the court. It
shall be open to the appellant to satisfy the Designated Court at the
appropriate stage that there is no sufficient or satisfactory evidence of any offence
under TADA having been committed by the appellant and when such a situation
should arise, we have no doubt that the Designated Court will examine and
dispose of the matter in accordance with law. With these observations, the
criminal appeal directed against the order dated 2-9-1993 in TMA No. 76 of 1992
is dismissed.
Special
Leave Petition (Crl.) Nos. 138-139 of 1994 53. Leave granted.
54.
The facts leading to the registration of the case CR No. 90 of 1989 and the
rejection of the application filed by the appellant Hitendra Vishnu Thakur
under Section 20(4) of TADA read with Section 167(2) CrPC have been examined to
and dealt with by us while dealing with Criminal Appeal Nos. 732-735 of 1993
and it is not necessary to repeat the same.
55. It
transpires from the perusal of the memorandum of appeal filed by the appellant
that the charge-sheet was filed against the appellant and others under Section
173 CrPC on 26-8-1993. In the said charge-sheet, names of four police officers
along with 12 other accused besides the absconding accused were also mentioned.
A note was appended to the charge-sheet that a supplementary charge-sheet
against them would be filed after obtaining requisite sanction from the
authorities concerned. The supplementary charge-sheet was filed on 13-12-1993
which happened to be the last date for framing of charges vide the directions
of this Court in SLP (Crl.) No. 2230 of 1993 dated 23-11-1993.
The
appellant and some of his co-accused made an application before the Designated Court challenging the validity of
sanction accorded by Respondent 2, authorising the Designated Court to take cognisance of the offence
against the accused. The written sanction was filed in the Designated Court on 24-8-1993, while the application challenging the validity of sanction
was filed on 6-12-1993.
Apart
from oral arguments even written submissions were filed in support of their
respective contentions regarding the validity or otherwise of the sanction
under Section 20- A(2) of TADA by learned counsel for the parties.
56.
Section 20-A of TADA which was introduced for the first time by Amendment Act
No. 43 of 1993 and deals with the "cognisance of offence" and reads
as under :
"20-A.
(1) Notwithstanding anything contained in the Code, no information about the
commission of an offence under this Act shall be recorded by the police without
the prior approval of the District Superintendent of Police.
647
(2) No court shall take cognisance of any offence under this Act without the
previous sanction of the Inspector General of Police, or as the case may be,
the Commissioner of Police." The section was obviously introduced to
safeguard a citizen from any vexatious prosecution under TADA. Vide Section 20-
A(2) of TADA no Court can take cognisance of an offence under TADA unless there
is a valid sanction accorded by the competent authority as prescribed by the
section. The grievance that since the sanction order referred to some of the
activities of the accused person in the year 1984 etc.
when
the 1987 Act had not even come into force, it rendered the sanction granted by
the competent authority as invalid was repelled by the Designated Court and the
correctness of that order has been assailed before us.
57. We
have gone through the order of sanction under Section 20-A(2) of TADA which has
been reproduced by the Designated Court in the order impugned before us and
find that the competent authority had after proper appraisal of the record and
after proper application of its mind accorded the sanction. The Designated
Court came to the conclusion that the order of sanction prima facie appeared to
be valid.
We
agree with the Designated Court, as at the stage when the challenge was laid to
the sanction order under Section 20- A(2) of the Act, it is only the 'prima
facie' case which was required to be established to show that the sanctioning
authority had applied its mind to the facts of the case before sanction was
accorded.
58.
Whether or not the allegations on the basis of which sanction has been accorded
are true or not would be established at the trial. Merely because the competent
authority also referred to the past history or the earlier activities of some
of the accused while according sanction under Section 20-A(2) of TADA, it would
not vitiate the sanction which prima facie appears to be legal and valid.
It
appears that while challenging the validity of sanction accorded by the
competent authority under Section 20-A(2) of TADA, the accused had also tried
to once again raise a fresh challenge to the applicability of the provisions of
TADA to their case which matter stood already rejected by the Desigated Court
and a writ petition against that order failed up to this Court. This was not a
permissible course to be adopted by the accused. The Designated Court rightly
rejected both the prayers made in the application i.e. to declare the sanction
as invalid and to hold that the provisions of TADA were not prima facie
attracted to the case. Nothing has been brought to our notice either during the
oral submissions or in the written submissions to show as to how the order of
sanction under Section 20-A(2) is invalid.
59. We
do not find that the sanction order suffers from any infirmity whatsoever.
There is, therefore, no merit in these appeals and the same are hereby dismissed.
Criminal
Appeal Nos. 736-737 of 1993
60.
These appeals are directed against the order of the Designated Court dated 31-7-1993 in Crl. Misc. Application No. 91 of 1993 and Crl. Misc. 648
Application No. 93 of 1993. The appeals are confined to the limited question
whether the appellant ought to have been released under Section 20(4) of TADA
read with Section 167(2) CrPC because of the default of the investigating
agency to complete the investigation and file the charge- sheet within the
prescribed time.
61.
The appellant was arrested on 22-9-1992. The appellant was working, as Circle
Police Inspector, Thane, during the relevant time. On being produced before the
Magistrate, he was remanded to custody from time to time and on 20-10-1992 he
was directed to be produced before the Designated Court since the offence of
which he was accused of was one under TADA. On 23-10-1992, the appellant
applied for bail to the Designated Court and provisional bail was granted to
him.
His
bail application, however, came to be rejected on 16-1- 1993 and he surrendered
to the bail bonds. After Section 20 of TADA was amended by Act 43 of 1993 the
investigating agency invoked the provisions of clause (bb) of subsection (4) of
Section 20 seeking extension of time for completing the investigation and
filing the charge-sheet against the appellant through its application dated
6-7-1993. The appellant also preferred a bail application before the Designated
Court under Section 20(4) of TADA read with Section 167(2) CRPC seeking release
on bail on account of the default of the investigating agency to file the
charge- sheet within the prescribed period. Both the applications were heard
and disposed of together. The Designated Court by its order (impugned in these
appeals) dated 1-7-1993 granted one month's time to the investigating agency to
file the charge-sheet and rejected the appellant's application for release on
bail.
62. On
the facts of the present case, Mr Khanwilkar learned counsel for the appellant,
submitted that the report of the Special Public Prosecutor was not a report in
the eye of law and since bail under Section 20(4) of TADA was refused to the
appellant only on account of the grant of extension of time, the order of the
Designated Court deserved to be set aside. The Designated Court while dealing
with the applications of the Public Prosecutor and appellant (CrMP Nos. 91 and
93 of 1993) held :
"So
far as the applicant-accused in T Crl MA No. 93 of 1993 is concerned, the
applicant has filed the application on 8-7-1993, whereas the application for
extension of time bearing T Crl MA No. 91 of 1993 has been filed by the Special
Public Prosecutor on 6-7-1993. I have already held above whether the Public
Prosecutor or the accused comes to the court first is not a criterion for
seeking the relief under Section 167 CrPC. In this matter the preparedness of
the applicant to seek bail from the Court be gathered from his application for
provisional bail bearing T Crl MA No. 78 of 1993 which is still pending. The
Special Public Prosecutor has prayed for extension of time on the ground that
the investigating machinery has not received sanction as required under Section
197 CrPC for the prosecution of a public servant. He is involved in a very
serious offence. The prosecution wants time to comply with the 649 provisions
of the law for the purpose of filing charge-sheet. Therefore, a reasonable time
of one month is granted."
63.
Thus Crl. Misc. Application No. 93 of 1993 was rejected while in Crl. Misc.
Application No. 91 of 1993, one month's time was granted, from the date of the
order, to file the charge-sheet failing which the appellant was directed to be
released on bail.
64. We
have perused the record. The Public Prosecutor had submitted a report (Crl.
Misc. Application No. 91 of 1993) in the form of an application under Section
20(4)(bb) of TADA. We find that the 'application' satisfies the requirements of
law and merely because it is labelled as 'an application', it would not cease
to be a report as envisaged by Section 20(4)(bb) of TADA. Learned counsel,
however, argued that extension of time could be granted only for completion of
investigation and that the ground on which extension was sought, namely, that
the sanction from the Government to launch the prosecution under Section 197 CrPC
was awaited, did not justify the grant of extension of time.
65. In
the report of the Public Prosecutor, it has been stated that the appellant is a
police officer and while the charge-sheet and supplementary charge-sheet
against other accused persons have already been filed the charge-sheet against
him would be submitted as soon as sanction from the Government is received.
Sanction is not strictly speaking a part of the investigation and this legal
position was conceded by Mr Tulsi, the learned Additional Solicitor General
also relieving us of the need to refer to the settled law on this subject. In
the absence of sanction there was no bar to file the charge-sheet and then
produce the sanction of the competent authority Subsequently with the permission
of the court. We have dealt with in extenso the ambit and scope of clause (bb)
of sub-section (4) of Section 20 of TADA elsewhere in the judgment. The
Designated Court could grant extension of time under clause (bb) on the report
of the Public Prosecutor for completion of the investigation and filing the challan
thereafter and for no other purpose. The Legislature has limited the grounds on
which extension could be granted and the Designated Court could not add to
those grounds. Since, on its plain reading clause (bb) could be invoked only if
the investigation was not complete, the Public Prosecutor could not be
permitted to seek extension of time under that clause for 'administrative
difficulties' or obtaining 'sanction' or the like grounds if investigation was
already complete. If extension of time was to be granted on grounds other than
the completion of the investigation, it would defeat the legislative intent
clearly manifested in clauses (b) and (bb) as amended by Act 43 of 1993 - not
to keep an accused in custody beyond the time prescribed by clause (b) or as
extended by clause (bb). The grant of extension beyond the period prescribed by
clause (b) very seriously affects the liberty of a citizen and the Designated
Court commits an error in the exercise of its jurisdiction if it grants
extension of time ignoring the provisions of clause (bb).
Grant
of extension under clause (bb) on grounds extraneous thereto, at the whims of
the investigating agency, cannot be permitted. The very object of the clause
would be defeated if the period of 650 compulsory detention is to be extended
in a casual manner for reasons other than those envisaged by clause (bb). In
the present case extension has been granted and bail declined to the appellant
on grounds not sanctioned by clause (bb) and the order of Designated Court
refusing bail to the appellant cannot be sustained. The order of the Designated Court in CrMP No. 93 of 1993 rejecting
the prayer for release on bail under clause (b) of Section 20(4) of TADA
because of the grant of extension of time under clause (bb) is, therefore, set
aside. For the reasons noticed above as well as those given by us while dealing
with the cases of Hitendra Vishnu Thakur (Crl. Appeal No. 732-735 of 1993) we
direct that the appellant Malarao T. Kakodal be released on bail on his
furnishing bail bonds in the sum of Rs 30,000 with two sureties of the like
amount to the satisfaction of the Designated Court subject, however, to the
following conditions :
(1)
That appellant shall before being released on bail furnish the correct and
complete address of the place where he would be residing within the
jurisdiction of the Designated
Court.
(2)
That the appellant shall report at the police station nearest to the place of
his residence every week on Mondays; and
(3)
The appellant shall not leave the place of his residence and move out of the
jurisdiction of the Designated
Court without seeking
permission from the Designated
Court and informing
the police station concerned about the same.
66. Since
we are directing the release of the appellant on bail on account of the default
of the prosecution to complete the investigation and file the challan within
the prescribed time, nothing said hereabove should be construed as any
expression of opinion on the merits of the case.
Criminal
Appeal No. 739 of 1993
67.
The appellant is aggrieved by the rejection of his bail application No. 186 of
1993 in TADA Spl. RA No. 86 of 1992 by the Designated Court on 3-8-1993. The Designated Court granted extension of time to the prosecution to file the
charge-sheet under clause (bb) of sub-section (4) of Section 20 of TADA and
rejected the prayer for his release on bail under Section 20(4) of TADA read
with Section 167(2) of the Code.
68.
The appellant was arrested in connection with TADA RA No. 61 of 1992 arising
out of CR No. 217 of 1992 in connection with certain offences committed on 12-9-1992.
After
the amendment of Section 20(4) of TADA by Act 43 of 1993, the appellant sought
his release on bail because of the default of the prosecuting agency to
complete the investigation and file the charge-sheet within the modified period
as prescribed under Section 20(4)(b) of TADA read with Section 167(2) of the
Code.
69.
That on the expiry of the prescribed period an accused in custody becomes
entitled to an order for being released on bail, if he is prepared to and
furnishes bail on account of the default of the prosecution to complete the
investigation and file the charge-sheet within the prescribed period, is no 651
longer in doubt. In the present case, however, we find that when the bail
application of the appellant filed under Section 20(4)(b) of TADA read with
Section 167(2) of the Code was taken up for consideration, the appellant did
not press the application and sought liberty of the court to apply for bail on
merits after the filing of the charge- sheet. This becomes obvious from the
following observations of the Designated Court:
"I
may mention here that this Court had taken up the bail applications of the
applicants- accused for hearing on merits. The accused Suresh Pappu Kalani and Jayawant
Dattaraya Suryarao did not press their applications on merits and sought
liberty of the Court to apply for bail on merits after the charge- sheet is
filed."
70.
Since the appellant did not press the application for his release on bail no
fault can be found with the order of the Designated Court in rejecting the application. Mr Khanwilkar, learned
counsel for the appellant, however, submitted that at no point of time any
concession was made on behalf of the appellant that he was not pressing the
bail application and that the observations which have been extracted above were
made by the Designated Court in a different context. The submission does not
appeal to us.
In
case no such concession had been made it was open to the appellant to make an
application before the Designated Court bringing that fact to its notice and
seeking review and correction of the record. That course was not adopted by the
appellant. It is well settled that if the record of a court is to be assailed,
a review in that court and not an SLP or an appeal in the Supreme Court is the
remedy (see with advantage State of Maharashtra v. Ramdas Shrinivas Nayak9; Apar
(P) Ltd. v. Union of India10). It appears to us that the argument now being
raised is clearly an afterthought as it was not even sought to be supported in
the memorandum of appeal by any affidavit. In view of the clear observations of
the Designated Court we cannot accept the submission of the learned counsel and
doubt the correctness of the record of the Designated Court. The argument that
the use of the expression "on merits" in the observations of the
Designated Court as extracted above could apply only to an application for bail
under Section 20(8) of the Act and not to an application filed under Section
20(4) of TADA is fallacious. Both the applications, whether filed under Section
20(4) of TADA or under Section 20(8) of TADA, are required to be disposed of on
their own merits by the Designated Court and, therefore, the distinction which
the learned counsel seeks to draw between the applications filed under Sections
20(4) and 20(8) of TADA by hair splitting is imaginary and has no basis. The
observations of the Designated Court clearly go to show that the application
filed by the appellant under Section 20(4) of TADA read with Section 167(2) of
the Code alone was under consideration by that court and it was that
application 9 (1982) 2 SCC 463: 1982 SCC (Cri) 478: (1983) 1 SCR 8 10 1992 Supp
(1) SCC 1: JT (1991) 4 SC 61 652 which was not pressed. The appellant cannot
now be heard to make any grievance about the dismissal of that bail application
which he did not press.
71. In
the written submissions filed by Mr Khanwilkar an alternative plea has also been
raised in the following terms:
"It
is submitted without prejudice to the aforesaid that even assuming without
admitting that the statement was made on behalf of the appellant that he was
not pressing the application on merits and sought liberty for consideration of
the said application after the charge-sheet was filed even then in law the
position would not materially alter to the disadvantage of the appellant for
the simple reason that as submitted earlier the relief that the appellant would
be entitled would relate back to the date of his application." The
submission extracted above has no factual foundation on facts. From the
observations (supra) of the Designated Court, it clearly emerges that the
appellant had not sought any liberty for consideration of the bail application
after the charge-sheet was filed. The statement made by the appellant in the
Designated Court is that he did not press the application and sought liberty of
the court to "apply for bail on merits after the charge-sheet is filed".
The appellant certainly is at liberty to apply for bail on merits after the
charge-sheet is filed and as and when such an application is filed the
Designated Court would deal with it in accordance with law. As at present,
however, no fault can be found with the order of the Designated Court in
rejecting the bail application which was not pressed before that court. This
appeal, thus, has no merits and is accordingly dismissed.
Criminal
Appeal Nos. 740-41 of 1993 72. Ramesh Bhai Patel is the appellant in Crl.
Appeal No. 740 of 1993 while Shanti Bhai Patel is the appellant in Crl. Appeal
No. 741 of 1993. Both the appellants are aggrieved by the rejection of their
bail applications filed under Section 20 (4) of TADA by the Designated Court
vide its order dated 3-8-1993. The Designated Court has granted extension to
the prosecution to complete the investigation and file the challan in the court
on an application filed by the Senior Inspector of Police on 14-7-1993.
73. Mr
K.G. Bhagat, the learned Senior Counsel, appearing for the appellants submitted
that the Designated Court fell in error in granting extension to the
prosecution on the application of the Senior Inspector of Police without any
report from the Special Public Prosecutor and for reasons which are not
contemplated by clause (bb) of Section 20(4) of TADA. We find substance in his
submission. The application seeking extension of time which was filed before
the Designated Court reads as follows:
"Application
for extension for further period to file charge-sheet in DEB CID CR No. 217 of
1992.
MAY IT
PLEASE YOUR HONOUR 653 1, Shri Shiwaji S. Sawant, Sr. Inspector of Police, DCB
CID U-III, Bombay, do hereby state on solemn affirmation as under:
2 I
say that I am Investigating Officer in DCB CID CR No. 217 of 1992 which was
registered by Byculla Police Station vide CR No. 446 of 1992 and the same was
transferred to DCB CID, Bombay, for further investigation.
2. 1 say
and submit that this branch has arrested 19 accused till today on the dates
mentioned against them.
3. 1
say and submit that in this case about 15 accused persons who are assailants as
well as the main conspirator including Daud Ibrahim Kaskar, Dubai based don,
his henchmen namely, Sunil Sawant, Sham Kishore Garikapatti, Bacchi Pande, Baba
Gabrial and others have absconded. Non-bailable arrest warrants against the
accused were returned as the same could not be executed in spite of all
efforts.
Interpoles,
CBI, Central Government, State Government has been apprised of the facts of the
case in order to book the absconding accused who had gone out of India.
Application for proclamation has already been filed before the Hon'ble Court.
4. 1
say and submit that on 7-6-1993 this Bench has arrested accused Jaiprakash
Singh, Shivcharan Singh @ Nacchi Singh and Prasad Ramakant Khade, who had taken
active part in the commission of offence and also recovered AK-56 assault
rifle, 3 hand grenades, 2 magazines and 16 live cartridges. From reliable
sources it is learnt 2 to 4 more accused are likely to be arrested very
soon-and as such their interrogation, confrontation, identification, recovery
have to be made. Because of these developments charge-sheet could not be filed
earlier. I say and submit that as far as investigation of Accused 1 to 17 is
already completed, the charges are prepared, except for some administrative difficulties,
the charce-sheet could not be filed.
5. 1
say that in view of the recent amendment to the Principal Act of TADA and in
view of the above explanation, I submit that Your Honour may in the interest of
justice, kindly permit us further extension of time to file charge- sheet
against Accused 1 to 17.
And
for this act of kindness, the prosecution shall as in duty-bound ever pray.
(S.S. Sawant)
Sr. Inspector of Police Solemnly affirmed at Bombay, This 14th Day of July,
1993, Identified by me Before me Special Public Prosecutor for Greater
Bombay." 654 The application, extracted above, does not fall within the
parameters of clause (bb) of sub-section (4) of Section 20 of TADA for the reasons
which we have already given while dealing with the ambit and scope of clause
(bb) of sub- section (4) of Section 20 of TADA. The Designated Court erred in
treating the application of the investigating officer as the report of the
Public Prosecutor. The mere identification by the Public Prosecutor of the
deponent of the affidavit (investigating officer) could not justify the
application to be treated as a report of the Public Prosecutor. Since there was
no report filed by the Public Prosecutor before the Designated Court, the
Designated Court faulted in granting extension "of compulsory
custody" on the application of the investigating officer. That apart, the
ground on which extension was sought, as emerging from para 4 of the
application (supra) did not justify the grant of permission for the extended
period in custody even on the report of the Public Prosecutor. Since it is
admitted in the said paragraph that the investigation against Accused 1 to 17
is 'already completed' but that the challan could not be filed "for some
administrative difficulties", it is obvious that the ground for seeking
extension of the period of compulsory detention of the appellant was extraneous
to the grounds contemplated by clause (bb) of Section 20(4) of TADA. The
Designated Court, therefore, fell in error in granting the extension to the
prosecution under the said provision. The consequence of the erroneous
extension of time would have entitled the appellant to be released on bail
under Section 20(4) of TADA read with Section 167(2) of the Code for the
default of the investigating agency without in any way affecting the
continuation of the investigation but we find that the appellants, in the
peculiar facts and circumstances of the case, cannot derive any benefit on that
account because before the Designated Court the appellants did not press their
bail applications and requested the Designated Court for consideration of the
bail applications after the chargesheet is filed implying thereby that the
appellants did not "offer" to be released on bail. The proviso to
sub-section (2) of Section 167 of the Code read with Section 20(4)(b) of TADA
expressly postulates that if the investigation is not completed within the
prescribed period and the challan filed in court, the Designated Court shall
release the accused on bail if "he is prepared to and does furnish
bail". By not pressing their bail applications, the appellants cannot be
said to be 'prepared to' be released on bail by furnishing the bail. Why the
appellants chose not to press their applications is not for us to conjecturise?
The argument of learned counsel for the respondent that being of the opinion
that extension under clause (bb) was likely to be granted the appellants chose
not to press their applications cannot be dismissed as a wholly fanciful
argument. In any event, the fact remains that for the reasons best known to
them, the appellants did not press and prosecute their bail applications before
the Designated Court when the same were taken up for consideration on merits. Mr
Bhagat, learned Senior Counsel appearing for the appellant, however, submitted
that the observations of the Designated Court to the effect that "whereas
the accused Shantilal Prabhubhai Patel and Ramesh Prabhubhai Patel requested
this 655 Court to consider their bail applications on merits after the
charge-sheet is filed" were not correct and that no such concession was
made on behalf of the appellant. We have already rejected a similar argument
while dealing with Criminal Appeal No. 739 of 1993. In these appeals also the
appellants did not approach the Designated Court for correction of the record.
Even in the grounds of appeal before us it was not asserted that the concession
had been wrongly attributed to the appellants. The. submission is clearly an
afterthought and an attempt to get out of a situation of the appellants' own
making. We, therefore, reject the argument as we find it wholly unacceptable.
We are also not persuaded to accept the submission of Mr Bhagat that the
reference to the application of the appellant which was not pressed before the Designated Court was to a different application and
not to the bail applications filed under Section 20(4) of the Act read with
Section 167(2) of the Code. The submission defies logic and is apparently an
argument of despair. The two Bail Application Nos. 195 and 196 of 1993 which
were being considered and dealt with by the Designated Court were the
applications filed by the appellants under Section 20(4) of TADA read with
Section 167(2) of the Code and it is futile to contend that the Designated
Court while considering those applications recorded the 'concession' with
regard to some other application which was not under consideration of the
court.
The
submission of Mr Bhagat is without any basis and is unacceptable. Mr Bhagat
lastly submitted that the Designated Court
should have, keeping in view the mandate of Section 167(2) of the Code,
admitted the appellants to bail because of the default of the prosecution
ignoring the so- called concession. We cannot agree. Whereas the period of
compulsory custody has been fixed by the Legislature, there is nothing in the
Act which may introduce a stage of compulsory bail if the applicant chooses not
to be released on bail or furnish the bail bonds. Since the appellants did not
prosecute and press their bail applications for release on bail under Section
20(4) of the Act read with Section 167(2) of the Code before the Designated
Court the rejection of their Bail Application Nos. 195 and 196 of 1993 by the
Designated Court cannot be found fault with at all. In the facts and
circumstances of the case, the impugned order of the Designated Court rejecting
the bail applications does not merit any interference. Both the appeals have no
merit and are hereby dismissed.
74.We
may, however, clarify that the non-interference with the impugned order of the
Designated Court, in the peculiar facts and circumstances of these appeals,
should not be construed as any expression of opinion on the merits of the case.
It has been submitted before us that applications under Section 20(8) of TADA
have already been filed and are pending disposal before the Designated Court.
The Designated Court shall deal with those applications on their own merits,
uninfluenced by the dismissal of these appeals and dispose the same of
expeditiously in accordance with law.
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