SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
P.K. Shaji @ Thammanam Shaji
Vs.
State of Kerala
Crl.A.No.1476 of 2005
(K.G.Balakrishnan and B.N.Srikrishna JJ.)
27.10.2005
JUDGMENT
K.G. Balakrishnan, J.
1. Leave granted.
2. The appellant challenges the order passed by a learned Single Judge of the
High Court of Kerala. The appellant was involved in a case registered by the
Thrikkakara Police Station for the offences under Section 120B and 307 IPC. He
was granted bail by the Sessions Court subject to certain conditions one of
which was that he should execute a bond for Rs. 50,000/- with two solvent
sureties. He was also directed to make himself available for interrogation
before the Investigating Officer on all Mondays and Fridays between 10 a.m. to
12.00 noon and was further directed that except for this purpose he shall not
enter the sessions division of Ernakulam until further orders without prior
permission of the learned Magistrate. Lastly, the Sessions Court directed that
the Investigating Officer shall scrupulously ensure that the appellant complied
with all the conditions imposed therein and shall report to the Magistrate in
case of any breach of conditions and the Magistrate shall take appropriate
action as if the conditions have been imposed by the Magistrate himself.
3. Subsequent to the passing of the bail order, the appellant herein executed
bail bonds before the Magistrate and was released on bail. The Investigating
Officer filed a report before the learned Magistrate alleging that the
appellant herein did not comply with the conditions as he had failed to report
before the Investigating Officer on all Mondays and Fridays. Pursuant to this
report, learned Magistrate issued a notice and the learned Counsel entered
appearance and submitted that the appellant apprehended assault at the hands of
the police and, therefore, he did not report before the Investigating Officer.
The learned Magistrate was not satisfied with the explanation given by the
learned Counsel for the appellant and he cancelled the bail granted to the
appellant. Aggrieved by the same, the appellant preferred a revision before the
High Court and the same was dismissed by the impugned Order.
4. It is contended by the appellant's learned Counsel that in cases where bail
is granted by the court in bailable offences under Section 436 of the Cr.P.C.,
the very same court is given power to cancel the bail if the conditions of the
bail bond, as regards the time and place of attendance, are not complied with;
so also when bail is granted by a court other than the High Court or Sessions
Court for non-bailable offences under Section 437 Cr.P.C. Under sub-Section 5
of the 437 Cr.P.C. the court is given power to cancel the bail and direct that
the person released on bail be arrested and committed to custody.
5. In the instant case, the bail was granted by the Sessions Court under
Section 439 Cr.P.C. Sub-Section 2 of Section 439 Cr.P.C. specifically says that
a High Court or the Sessions Court may direct that any person who has been
released on bail be arrested and committed to custody. The power of the High
Court or the Sessions Court under sub-Section 2 of Section 439 Cr.P.C. is very
wide and it specifically says that the Sessions Court or the High Court has got
power to cancel the bail granted by any of the subordinate courts under Chapter
33 of the Criminal Procedure Code.
6. The plea of the appellant's learned Counsel is that if the Sessions Court
had granted bail, the order of cancellation of such bail should also have been
passed by the Sessions Court or by any superior Court and not by the learned
Magistrate who is not empowered to cancel it, As a general proposition, the
plea raised by the appellant is correct. It is equally true that the accused
who is on bail, should be heard before an order of cancellation of bail is
passed by the Court. This Court in Gurdev Singh and Another vs. State of
Bihar and another1: 5 held that the accused must be
given notice and opportunity of hearing before the bail granted to him is
cancelled.
7. In the present case, the last condition stated in the Bail Order was to the
following effect:-
"The investigating officer shall scrupulously ensure that the Petitioner
complies with all conditions hereby imposed and shall report breach of
conditions, if any promptly to the learned Magistrate who on receipt of such
report shall take appropriate action as if the conditions have been imposed and
the Petitioner released on bail by the learned Magistrate himself".
8. The order of the Sessions Court shows that the learned Magistrate has
been empowered to consider the question of violation of any of the conditions
imposed by the Sessions Court and was given powers to pass appropriate orders.
# The plea raised by the appellant's learned Counsel is that when the learned
Magistrate had no such power, the Sessions Court was not empowered to invest
power in the Magistrate. We do not find any force in this contention. The
superior court can always give directions of this nature and authorise the
subordinate court to pass appropriate orders and the trial Magistrate would be
the competent authority to decide whether any condition had been violated by
the person who had been released on bail. When there is a specific direction to
pass appropriate orders as if the conditions for granting bail had been imposed
by the learned Magistrate himself, the impugned Order is legal and valid.
9. The contention of learned Counsel for the appellant that the appellant was
in prison in connection with another case and that is why he could not appear
before the Investigating Officer, does not appear to be true as such a plea was
not raised before the learned Magistrate. The learned Counsel for the appellant
only contended before the learned Magistrate that he apprehended assault at the
hands of the police and, therefore, he refrained from making himself available
before the investigating officer. The learned Magistrate rightly rejected this
plea. The Order passed by the learned Magistrate was correct and the High Court
has rightly rejected the Revision filed by the appellant.
10. We see no reason to interfere with the impugned judgment and the appeal is
accordingly dismissed.
12000 (4) Crimes 103