Supreme Court of India

State Of Rajasthan, Jaipur vs Balchand @ Baliay on 20 September, 1977

Supreme Court of India
State Of Rajasthan, Jaipur vs Balchand @ Baliay on 20 September, 1977
Equivalent citations: 1977 AIR 2447, 1978 SCR (1) 535
Author: V Krishnaiyer
Bench: Krishnaiyer, V.R.
           PETITIONER:
STATE OF RAJASTHAN, JAIPUR

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
BALCHAND @ BALIAY

DATE OF JUDGMENT20/09/1977

BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
UNTWALIA, N.L.

CITATION:
 1977 AIR 2447		  1978 SCR  (1) 535
 1977 SCC  (4) 308


ACT:
Bail-Interim   bail  pending  the  hearing  of	an   appeal-
Guidelines  regarding  grant of-Supreme	 Court	Rules  1966,
Order XLVII, rule 6, r/w Order XXI rule 6.



HEADNOTE:
The petitioner-respondent was convicted and sentenced by the
Sessions  Court but released after the judgment of the	High
Court.	The petitioner surrendered before the trial court as
required  under Order XXI rule 6 of the Supreme Court  Rules
after  leave  was  granted to the State to  file  an  appeal
against acquittal by the High Court and moved an application
for bail.
Granting the bail, the Court,
HELD : The basic rule is bail, not jail, except-where  there
are  circumstances  suggestive of 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 by the petitioner who seeks enlargement on bail
from the court.	 When considering the question of bail,	 the
gravity	 of the offence involved and the heinousness of	 the
crime which are likely to induce the petitioner to avoid the
course of justice must weigh with the court.
In the instant case the circumstances and the social  milieu
do not militate against the petitioner being granted bail on
monetary  suretyship  at this stage.  At the same  time	 any
possibility of the abscondence or evasion or other abuse can
be  taken  care of by a direction that the  petitioner	will
report	 himself  before  the  police  station	once   every
fortnight.   He	 was on bail throughout the  trial  but	 was
released  after	 the judgment of the High  Court,  there  is
nothing	 to suggest that he has abused the trust  placed  in
him  by the court.  He is not it desperate character  or  an
unsocial element who is likely to betray the confidence that
the court may place on him to turn up to take justice at the
hands of the court. [536 A-D]
OBSERVATION:
While  the system of pecuniary bail has a  tradition  behind
it,  it	 may  well  be	that  in  most	cases  not  monetary
suretyship but undertaking by relations of the petitioner or
organisation  to  which he belongs may be  better  and	more
socially relevant.



JUDGMENT:

CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Crl. Misc. Petition No.
1424-1425 of 1977.

(Application for release on Bail).

S. M. Jain, for the appellant.

D. Mukherjee, V. S. Dave, R. C. Tyagi and S. S. Khanduja,
for the respondent.

I. Makwana, for the intervener.

The Order of the Court, was delivered by
KRISHNA IYER, J. The petitioner moves for bail having
surrendered after leave was granted to the State to file an
appeal against acquittal by the High Court.

536

The basic rule may perhaps be tersely put as bail, not jail,
except where there are circumstances suggestive of 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, by the petitioner who
seeks enlargement on bail from the court. We do. not intend
to be exhaustive but only illustrative.
It is true that the gravity of the offence involved is
likely to induce the petitioner to avoid the course of
justice and must weigh with us when considering the question
of jail. So also the heinousness of the crime. Even so,
the record of the petitioner in this case is that, while
lie, has been on bail throughout in the trial court and he
was released after the judgment of the High Court, there is
nothing to suggest that he, has abused the trust placed in
him by the court; his social circumstances also are not so
unfavourable in the sense of his being a desparate character
or unsocial element who is likely to betray the confidence
that the court may place in him to turn up to take justice,
at the hands of the court. He is stated to be a young man
of 27 years with a family to maintain. The circumstances
and the social milieu do not militate against the petitioner
being granted bail at this stage. At the same time any
possibility of the abscondence or evasion or other abuse can
be taken care of by a direction that the petitioner will
report himself before the notice station at Baren once every
fortnight.

This petitioner will be released on bail on his entering
into a bond of his own and one surety for Rs. 5,000/- to the
satisfaction of the Additional District & Sessions Judge,
Baren. While the system- of pecuniary bail has a tradition
behind it, the time has come for rethinking on the subject.
It may well be that in most cases not monetary suretyship
but undertaking by relations of the petitioner or organi-
sation to which he belongs may be better and more socially
relevant. Even so, in this case we stick to the practice
and direct the furnishing of one surety for Rs. 5,000/-.
Application for intervention allowed.
S.R.

Bail granted.

537