✦ High Court of India

High Court

Case Details

Court No. - 88 Case :- CRIMINAL MISC. BAIL APPLICATION No. - 14037 of 2023 Applicant :- Hamid Opposite Party :- State of U.P. Counsel for Applicant :- Ashish Kumar Counsel for Opposite Party :- G.A. Hon'ble Vikram D. Chauhan,J. Learned A.G.A. submits that instructions have been received and he has no objection in case the bail application is heard on merits.

Legal Reasoning

Heard learned counsel for the applicant, learned A.G.A. for the State and perused the record. It is submitted by learned counsel for the applicant that the applicant was not named in the first information report. The first information has been lodged with the allegation that the co- accused Dinesh Kumar Singh and Vinay Kumar Singh have taken passport of the informant and promised job in Iraq. Subsequently, when the informant transferred the amount, the aforesaid persons have closed the office and ran away and have not returned the money of the informant. No amount has been transferred by the informant in the bank account of the applicant. There is no evidence linking the applicant with the alleged crime. The applicant in similar offence has already been enlarged on bail by this Court by order dated 2.1.2023 in Criminal Misc. Bail Application No.57041 of 2022. Applicant is languishing in jail since 13.10.2022 and in case he is released on bail, he will not misuse the liberty of bail and will cooperate in the trial. Learned A.G.A. for the State opposed the prayer for bail but does not dispute factual matrix of the case. Learned AGA has pointed out the criminal antecedents of the Applicant. No material or circumstance has been brought to the notice of this Court with regard to tampering of evidence or intimidating of witness in previous criminal cases. In Ash Mohammad v. Shiv Raj Singh, (2012) 9 SCC 446, the Apex Court in para 30 has observed: "We may hasten to add that when we state that the accused is a history-sheeter we may not be understood to have said that a history-sheeter is never entitled to bail. But, it is a significant factor to be taken note of regard being had to the nature of crime in respect of which he has been booked." In the case of Prabhakar Tewari Vs. State of U.P. and another, 2020 (11) SCC 648, the Hon'ble Supreme Court has observed that pendency of several criminal cases against an accused may itself cannot be a basis for refusal of bail. In so far as criminal antecedents of the applicant is concerned, it is not the case of the State that applicant might tamper with or otherwise adversely influence the investigation, or that he might intimidate witnesses before or during the trial. The State has also not placed any material that applicant in past attempted to evade the process of law. If the accused is otherwise found to be entitled to bail, he cannot be denied bail only on the ground of criminal history, no exceptional circumstances on basis of criminal antecedents have been shown to deny bail to accused, hence, the Court does not feel it proper to deny bail to the applicant just on the ground that he had criminal antecedent. The principle that Bail is a rule and Jail is an exception has been well recognised by Apex Court more specifically on the touch stone of Article 21 of the Constitution. The said principle has been reiterated by the Apex Court in Satyendra Kumar Antil Vs Central Bureau of Investigation and another, 2022 (10) SCC 51. Learned AGA has not shown any exceptional circumstances which would warrant denial of bail to the applicant. No material, facts or circumstances has been shown by learned AGA that the accused may tamper with the evidence or witnesses or the accused is of such character that his mere presence at large would intimidate the witnesses or that accused will use his liberty to subvert justice or tamper with the evidence. It is settled principle of law that the object of bail is to secure the attendance of the accused at the trial. No material particulars or circumstances suggestive of the applicant fleeing from justice or thwarting the course of justice or creating other troubles in the shape of repeating offences or intimidating witnesses and the like have been shown by learned AGA for the State. Learned AGA for the State has not shown any material or circumstances that the accused/applicant is not entitled to bail in larger interests of the public or State. Considering the facts and circumstances of the case, nature of offence, evidence, complicity of the accused, submissions of learned counsel for the parties and without expressing any opinion on the merits of the case, the Court is of the view that the applicant has made out a case for bail. The bail application is allowed. Let the applicant Hamid involved in Case Crime No.480 of 2022, under Sections 420, 467, 468, 471, 120B I.P.C., Police Station Sector 20, District Gautam Buddh Nagar be released on bail on furnishing a personal bond and two sureties each in the like amount to the satisfaction of the court concerned subject to the following conditions:- 1. The applicant will not tamper with the evidence during the trial. 2. The applicant will not pressurize/intimidate the prosecution witness. 3. The applicant will appear before the trial court on the date fixed, unless personal presence is exempted and/or the applicant shall make himself available for interrogation by a police officer as and when required. 4. The applicant shall not commit an offence similar to the offence of which he is accused, or suspected, of the commission of which he is suspected. 5 . The applicant shall not directly or indirectly make any inducement, threat or promise to any person acquainted with the facts of the case so as to dissuade him from disclosing such facts to the Court or to any police officer or tamper with the evidence. 6. The applicant shall not leave India without the previous permission of the Court. In case of breach of any of the above condition, the prosecution shall be at liberty to move bail cancellation application before this Court. Order Date :- 2.5.2023 Bhaskar Digitally signed by :- BHASKAR High Court of Judicature at Allahabad

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