Supreme Court Guidelines

ANTICIPATORY BAIL

Gurbaksh Singh Sibbia v. State of Punjab
AIR 1980 SC 1632: (1980) 2 SCC 565: 1980 Cri LJ 1125: 1980 (3) SCR 383
Dated: April 09, 1980
BENCH: Justices Y.V. Chandrachud (CJ), P.N. Bhagwati, N.L. Untwalia, RS. Pathak, 0. Chinnappa Reddy

Court laid down  the following guidelines,  which  the Courts are required  to   keep in mind while dealing with an application for grant of anticipatory bail:

1. Though the  power  conferred  under  Section  438  of the Code can  be described  as of an extraordinary character, this does  not  justify  the conclusion  that  the power must be exercised in exceptional cases only because it is of an extraordinary character. Nonetheless, the discretion under the Section has to be exercised with due care and circumspection depending on circumstances justifying its exercise.

2. Before power under sub-section (1) of Section 438 of the Code is exercised, the Court must be satisfied  that the applicant  invoking the provision  has  reason  to  believe that he is likely to be arrested  for a non-bailable offence and  that  belief must  be founded on reasonable grounds.  Mere “fear” is not  belief, for which  reason,  it  is not  enough for the applicant to show that he has some sort of vague apprehension that someone is going to  make an accusation  against  him, in pursuance of which he may be arrested. The  grounds on which  the  belief of the applicant  is based  that he may be arrested  for a non-bailable offence, must be capable of being examined by the Court objectively. Specific events and  facts must be disclosed  by the  applicant  in order to  enable the Court to judge the  reasonableness of his belief  the existence  of which  is the sine qua non of the exercise of power conferred by the Section.

3. The observations made in Balchand Jain’s case, (AIR 1977 SC 366), regarding  the nature  of the  power  conferred  by Section  438 and  regarding  the  question  whether the  conditions  mentioned  in  Section  437  should  be  read  into  Section  438  cannot be treated  as conclusive  on  the  point. There  is no warrant for  reading into Section 438, the conditions  subject  to  which  bail  can  be granted  under  Section  437(1)  of the Code and therefore,  anticipatory  bail  cannot  be  refused  in  respect  of offences like criminal  breach  of  trust  for  the  mere  reason  that  the punishment  provided  for is imprisonment for life. Circumstances may broadly justify the grant of bail in such cases too,  though  of course,  the  Court  is free  to  refuse anticipatory  bail  in any case if there is material before it justifying such refusal.

4. No  blanket  order  of bail should  be passed  and  the Court which grants anticipatory bail must take care to specify  the  offence  or  the offences  in  respect  of which alone the order will be effective. While granting relief under Section 438(1) of the Code, appropriate conditions can be imposed under Section 438(2) so as to ensure an uninterrupted investigation.  One  such  condition  can  even  be  that  in  the  event  of the police making out  a case of a likely discovery  under Section  27 of the Evidence Act, the person released on bail shall be liable to be taken in police custody for facilitating the recovery. Otherwise, such an order can become a charter of lawlessness and a weapon to stifle  prompt  investigation  into  offences  which  could  not  possibly be predicated when the order was passed.

5. The filing of First Information Report (FIR) is not  a  condition  precedent  to  the exercise of  power  under  Section  438. The  imminence  of  a likely  arrest  founded  on a reasonable belief can be shown to exist even if an FIR is not yet filed.

6. An anticipatory  bail can be granted even after an FIR is filed so long as the  applicant has not been arrested.

7. The provisions of Section 438  cannot  be invoked  after  the  arrest  of the  accused. After arrest,  the  accused  must seek his remedy  under Section 437  or Section 439 of the Code, if he wants to be released on  bail in respect of the offence or offences for which he is arrested.

8. An interim  bail  order  can  be passed  under  Section  438 of  the  Code without  notice to the Public Prosecutor  but  notice should  be issued  to  the  Public Prosecutor  or  to the Government  advocate  forthwith  and  the question  of bail should  be  re-examined in the light of respective contentions of the parties. The ad-interim order too must conform  to the requirements of the Section and suitable conditions should  be imposed on the applicant even at that stage.

9. Though it is not necessary  that the operation  of an order passed  under Section  438(1) of the Code be limited in point of time but  the  Court  may,  if there are  reasons for doing so, limit the  operation  of  the order  to  a short  period  until  after  the  filing of FIR in respect of  the matter covered  by  the order. The  applicant  may,  in such cases, be directed  to  obtain  an  order  of  bail  under Section  437  or  439  of the  Code within a reasonable short period after the filing of the FIR.

NOTE: The Above stated principles are explained in Savitri Agarwal v. State of Maharashtra, AIR 2009 SC 3173.

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