✦ High Court of India

The High Court

Case Details

IN THE HIGH COURT OF ORISSA AT CUTTACK BLAPL No. 693 of 2025 Sarmit Urma @ Milu …. Petitioner Mr. Chitaranjan Mishra, Adv. State of Odisha -versus- …. Opposite Party Mr. T.K. Acharya, ASC CORAM: DR.JUSTICE S.K. PANIGRAHI Order No.

Decision

ORDER 03.05.2025 Dated F.I.R. No. Police Station Sections Case No. and Courts’ Name 131 11.06.2023 Athamallik Spl. (NDPS) Case No.11/2023 pending in the court of learned Special Judge, Athhamallik Section 20(b)(ii)(C)/29 of N.D.P.S. Act. 01. 1. This matter is taken up through hybrid arrangement. 2. Heard learned counsel for the Parties. 3. The petitioner being in custody in connection with Special (NDPS) Case No. 11 of 2023 arising out of Athamallik P.S. Signature Not Verified Digitally Signed Signed by: LITARAM MURMU Designation: Personal Assistant Reason: Authentication Location: OHC Date: 14-May-2025 18:57:22 Page 1 of 6 Case No.131 of 2023, pending in the court of the learned Special Judge, Athamallik, registered for the alleged commission of offence under Section 20(b) (ii)(C)/29 of the NDPS Act, has filed this petition for his release on bail. 4. The prosecution case in short is that while getting information regarding trading of ganja in Athmallik area, the Inspector of Police STF, CIC, CB of Odisha proceeded to the house of accused of village Chandrapur. Seeing them, the present accused along with other co-accused persons tried to flee away from the spot. Thereafter, they caught hold the present accused along with other two co-accused persons and on search, they recovered four numbers of plastic gunny bag and after measurement, it could be known that the said ganja of 161 kg was seized from the possession of accused in presence of Executive Magistrate. During interrogation, the accused admitted that he along with other co-accused persons used to cultivate ganja in the jungle and after producing the same from Gochhapada side for trading purpose. On being demand by the police, the accused could not produce any license or authority regarding possession of such contraband ganja. Hence, this case. 5. Learned counsel for the Petitioner submits nothing has been seized from the conscious possession of the present Signature Not Verified Digitally Signed Signed by: LITARAM MURMU Designation: Personal Assistant Reason: Authentication Location: OHC Date: 14-May-2025 18:57:22 Page 2 of 6 Petitioner and there is no iota of evidence against the present Petitioner. He further submits that the Petitioner is in custody since 11.06.2023. Hence, he submits that, the prayer of the present Petitioner may be allowed. 6. Learned counsel for the State vehemently opposes the prayer for bail stating that the quantity of ganja seized is clearly above the commercial quantity prescribed under the Act which bars granting of bail. 7. At the heart of this petition lies a request for bail in a case involving alleged possession and transportation of commercial quantity of Ganja, precisely 161 kg. as per the seizure report. The law under the NDPS Act draws a firm line when it comes to such quantities. The threshold for judicial discretion in granting bail under Section 37 is significantly higher than in ordinary offences. The Court is bound to be satisfied, on reasonable grounds, not only that the accused is not guilty of the offence but also that he is not likely to commit a similar offence while on bail. 8. The main thrust of the Petitioner’s argument is that he was not present at the spot, no contraband was recovered from him directly, and his implication rests solely on the confessional statement of a co-accused. While these are certainly relevant considerations, they cannot be viewed in isolation, especially in the context of how narcotics offences Signature Not Verified Digitally Signed Signed by: LITARAM MURMU Designation: Personal Assistant Reason: Authentication Location: OHC Date: 14-May-2025 18:57:22 Page 3 of 6 are frequently committed, not by lone actors but through loosely connected chains involving multiple participants, each playing a role in transportation, logistics, concealment, or financing. 9. It is well settled that bail jurisprudence under the NDPS Act, particularly for commercial quantities, is governed by a more stringent test. In the case of Union of India v. Ajay Kumar Singh @ Pappu1 the Supreme Court reiterated the stance that no person accused of trading commercial quantity of narcotics is liable to be released on bail unless Court is satisfied of reasonable grounds proving innocence. The relevant excerpts are produced below: “16. In view of the above provisions, it is implicit that no person accused of an offence involving trade in commercial quantity of narcotics is liable to be released on bail unless the court is satisfied that there are reasonable grounds for believing that he is not guilty of such an offence and that he is not likely to commit any offence while on bail. 17. The quantity of “ganja” recovered is admittedly of commercial quantity. The High Court has not recorded any finding that the respondent-accused is not prima facie guilty of the offence alleged and that he is not likely to commit the same offence when enlarged on bail rather his antecedents are indicative that he is a regular offender. In the absence of recording of such satisfaction by the court, we are of the opinion that the Signature Not Verified 1 2023 SCC OnLine SC 346 Digitally Signed Signed by: LITARAM MURMU Designation: Personal Assistant Reason: Authentication Location: OHC Date: 14-May-2025 18:57:22 Page 4 of 6 High Court manifestly erred respondent-accused on bail.” in enlarging the 10. Here, the record shows that during investigation, the Petitioner’s name surfaced in the context of broader operational details provided by the apprehended co- accused. While such statements may not be substantive evidence at trial unless duly corroborated, at this stage they are not to be dismissed out of hand. 11. The Petitioner’s alleged role, even if indirect, cannot be brushed aside without trial scrutiny. Releasing an accused connected to such an offence on bail would amount to pre- judging the issue, something this Court is not prepared to do. 12. It is true that other co-accused persons have been enlarged on bail. However, parity is not a passport to liberty in all cases. The principle must bend where the roles are unequal or the surrounding facts distinguish the Petitioner's case. Courts must be vigilant that granting bail in cases involving organized drug trafficking does not inadvertently embolden the network. 13. The Court is conscious that the petitioner has spent considerable time in custody and the investigation is over. But in cases under the NDPS Act involving commercial quantity, bail cannot be granted only on the basis of time Signature Not Verified spent. The law requires reasonable grounds to believe the Digitally Signed Signed by: LITARAM MURMU Designation: Personal Assistant Reason: Authentication Location: OHC Date: 14-May-2025 18:57:22 Page 5 of 6 accused is not guilty and will not commit a similar offence. That test is not met in the present case. 14. Accordingly, the BLAPL is dismissed. Judge (Dr. S.K. Panigrahi) Murmu Signature Not Verified Digitally Signed Signed by: LITARAM MURMU Designation: Personal Assistant Reason: Authentication Location: OHC Date: 14-May-2025 18:57:22 Page 6 of 6

This is the original judgment text as indexed from the source corpus. Always verify against the official court record before relying on it in a filing — you can do so on eCourts or the Supreme Court of India website. ← Search more judgments