whether the period of 34 days spent in house arrest by the appellant is to be counted towards the period of 90 days under Section 167 Cr.P.C., ?
Several issues arise which we articulate as follows:
1) What is the nature of an order of transit remand? Is it an order passed under Section 167 of the Cr.PC.?
2) What is the nature of the interim order dated 28.08.2018 passed in the writ petition by the appellant in the High Court of Delhi as extended? Are these orders passed under Section 167 of the Cr.P.C.?
3) What is the effect of the judgment of the High Court of Delhi dated 1.10.2018 wherein the arrest of the appellant and the transit remand are found illegal?
4) Does the House arrest of the appellant amount to police custody or judicial custody? Can there be an order for custody other than police custody and judicial custody under Section 167 Cr.P.C.? Is House 31 arrest custody within the embrace of Section 167 of Cr.P.C.?
5) Is the House arrest of the appellant not custody under Section 167 of the Cr.P.C. on the score that the appellant could not be interrogated by the competent investigating officer?
6) What is the effect of the appellant being in police custody from 15.4.2020 till 25.4.2020 and the alleged acquiescence of the appellant in the order and the custody undergone by the appellant?
7) Whether broken periods of custody otherwise traceable to Section 167 Cr.P.C. suffice to piece together the total maximum period of custody permitted beyond which the right to default bail arises or whether the law giver has envisaged only custody which is continuous?
8) What is the impact of mandate of Article 21 and Article 22 of the Constitution?
REPORTABLE
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CRIMINAL APPEAL NO.510 OF 2021
[ARISING OUT OF SLP (CRIMINAL) NO. 1796/2021]
GAUTAM NAVLAKHA … APPELLANT(S)
VERSUS
NATIONAL INVESTIGATION AGENCY … RESPONDENT (S)
J U D G M E N T
K.M. JOSEPH, J.
1. Leave granted.
2. On the basis of FIR No. 4 of 2018 dated
08.01.2018, registered at Vishrambagh Police
Station, Pune, Maharashtra, which was one
registered under Sections 153A, 505(1B) and
Section 34 of IPC to which Section 120(B) was
1
added on 06.03.2018 and still further into
which, Sections 13, 16, 17, 18, 18B, 20, 38 and
40 of the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act,
1967 (hereinafter referred to as ‘the UAPA’,
for short), were added on 17.05.2018, and, in
which FIR, the name of the appellant was added
on 22.08.2018, the appellant came to be
arrested from his residence in Delhi on
28.08.2018. The appellant moved Writ Petition
No. 2559 of 2018 seeking a Writ of Habeas
Corpus in the High Court of Delhi. The High
Court, apart from issuing notice, inter alia,
ordered that no further precipitate action of
removing the appellant from Delhi be taken till
the matter was taken at 04:00 P.M.. The Order
was passed at 02:45 P.M.. In the meantime, the
CMM at Saket, Delhi disposed of an Application
seeking transit remand with the following
Order:
2
“FIR No. 4/18
PS: Vishrambagh, Pune, Maharashtra
U/s: 153A/505(1)(B)/117/341PC & u/s
13/15/17/18/185/20/39/40 of Unlawful
Activities Prevention Act.
State Vs. Gautam Pratap Navlakha
28.08.2018
Present: Sh. Jagdamba Pandey, Ld. APP
for the State
IO Assistant Police Inspector
Sushil V. Bobde alongwith
ACP Ganesh Gawade and DCP Bachchan
Singh Inspector Sanjay Gupta, PS
Special Cell, Lodhi Colony, New
Delhi.
Accused Gautam Pratap Navlakha
produced in Police custody.
Sh. Om Prakash, Ld. LAC for the
accused.
This is a handwritten application
preferred by the 10 Assistant Police
Inspector Sushil V. Bodbe seeking
transit remand of two days the above
noted accused persons. The identity of
10 as a police officer of P
Vishrambagh, Pune, Maharashtra is
established upto my satisfaction upon
his having shown his identity card.
Heard. It is submitted by the IO
that above noted accused is required
in above noted case FIR registered at
PS Vishrambagh, Pune, Maharashtra and
has been arrested from his house at
Kalkaji, Delhi. It is further submitted
by the IO that the accused has been
arrested without warrant and he is
3
required to be produced before
competent Court i.e. Court of Ld.
Special Court, Shivaji Nagar, Pune,
Maharashtra and therefore, his transit
remand may be granted.
Heard. Considered. I have given my
thoughtful consideration to the
submissions made by the IO and the APP
for the State.
As per the police papers, FIR No
4/18 has been registered under sections
153A/505(1)(B)/117/34 IPC & u/s
13/16/17/18/18B/20/39/40 of Unlawful
Activities Prevention Act at police
station Vishronbagh, Pune, Maharashtra
wherein the accused is required. As per
the arrest memo the accused namely
Gautam Pratap Navlakha was arrested
on 28.08.2018 at. 2.15 pm at Kalkajl,
Delhi. Intimation of arrest of accused
has been given to his partner/friend.
As the accused is required for
further investigation of the case,
therefore, his transit remand Is
granted till 30.08.2018. The accused
be produced before the concerned Ld.
Special Court, Shivaji Nagar, Pune,
Maharashtra on or before 30.08.2018
without fail. Accused be got medically
examined as per rules and the
directions of the Hon'ble Supreme
Court. A copy of this order be given
dasti to the Investigating Officer.
Application of transit remand is
disposed of accordingly. Necessary
record be maintained by the
Ahlmad.
4
(Manish Khurana)
Commissioner/SE/
District Court, Saket
New.Delh1/28.08.2018”
3. Thereafter, when the Writ Petition, filed
by the appellant before the High Court, came up
at 04.00 P.M., the High Court passed the
following Order on 28.08.2018:
“2. Court is informed at 4 pm by
Mr. Rahul Mehra, learned Standing
Counsel for the State that an order
was passed today by the learned
Chief Metropolitan Magistrate
(CMM), South East District, Saket
in the post lunch session granting
transit remand for producing the
Petitioner before the learned
Special Court, Shivaji Nagar, Pune
on or before 30th August, 2018.
3. The Court is also shown the
documents produced before the
learned CMM most of which
(including FIR No. 4 of 2018
registered at Police Station
Vishrambagh, Pune) are in Marathi
language and only the application
filed for transit remand before
the learned CMM is in Hindi.
However, it is not possible to
make out from these documents what
precisely the case against the
petitioner is.
5
4. Since it is already 4.30 pm,
the Court considers it appropriate
to direct that pursuant to the
order dated 28th August, 2018 of
the learned CMM, the petitioner
will not be taken away from Delhi
and this case will be taken up as
the first case tomorrow morning.
5.Translations of all the
documents produced before the CMM
be provided to this Court
tomorrow.
6. The petitioner shall, in the
meanwhile, be kept at the same
place from where the was picked
up with two guards of the
Special Cell, Delhi Police along
with local Police that was
originally here to arrest the
petitioner, outside the house.
Barring his lawyers, and the
ordinary residents of the house,
the petitioner shall not meet
any other persons or step out of
the premises till further
orders.”
4. A Writ Petition was filed in the Supreme
Court as Writ Petition (Criminal) Diary No.
32319 of 2018 on the next day. This Writ
6
Petition was filed by five illustrious persons
in their own fields, as is observed by this
Court in the Judgment, which is reported in
Romila Thapar and Others vs. Union of India
and others1. The subject matter of the Writ
Petition was the allegedly high-handed action
of the Maharashtra Police and the arrest of
five Activists which included the appellant on
28.08.2018 from their homes. The relief sought
by the Writ Petitioners was to ensure a
credible investigation into the arrest of the
five Human Rights Activists. Interim orders
were passed in the Writ Petition by this Court,
under which, the benefit of house arrest of the
appellant, inter alia, was also ordered to be
extended to others. The order of house arrest
of appellant was extended. The relief sought
for, namely, an independent investigation in
the Writ Petition, filed in this Court, was
1 (2018) 10 SCC 753
7
rejected by the majority of Judges with Dr.
D.Y. Chandrachud, J., dissenting. We notice
paragraph-40, which reads as follows:
“40. Accordingly, this writ
petition is disposed of with
liberty to the accused concerned
to take recourse to appropriate
remedy as may be permissible in
law. The interim order passed by
this Court on 29-8-2018 (Romila
Thapar v. Union of India, 2018
SCC OnLine SC 1343) shall
continue for a period of four
weeks to enable the accused to
move the court concerned. The
said proceedings shall be decided
on its own merits uninfluenced by
any observation made in this
judgment, which is limited to
the reliefs claimed in the writ
petition to transfer the
investigation to an independent
investigating agency and/or
court-monitored investigation.
The investigating officer is
free to proceed against the
accused concerned as per law.
All the accompanying
applications are also disposed
of in terms of this judgment.”
5. This Judgment was rendered on 28.09.2018 by
this Court. Thereafter, the Writ Petition,
filed by the appellant, before the High Court
of Delhi, was allowed. We may, at once notice,
8
that the relief sought in the Writ Petition was
initially one seeking a Writ of Habeas Corpus.
Thereafter, the Court came to be concerned with
the legality of the Order of transit remand
passed by the CMM, which we have adverted to.
We may notice only, paragraphs-28 and 29, 30
and 31 of judgment dated 01.10.2018:
“28. With there being
several non-compliances of the
mandatory requirement of
Article 22(1), Article 22(2)
of the Constitution and
Section 167 read with Section
57 and 41(1)(ba) of the Cr PC,
which are mandatory in nature,
it is obvious to this Court
t h a t t h e o r d e r p a s s e d b y t h e
l e a r n e d C M M o n 2 8 t h A u g u s t ,
2 0 1 8 g r a n t i n g t r a n s i t remand
to the Petitioner is
unsustainable in law. The said
order is accordingly hereby
set aside.
29.In view of Section 56
read with Section 57 Cr PC, in
the absence of the remand
order of the learned CMM, the
detention of the Petitioner,
which has clearly exceeded 24
9
hours, is again untenable in
law. Consequently, the house
arrest of the Petitioner comes
to anend as of now.
30. It is clarified that this
order will not preclude the
State of Maharashtra from
proceeding further in
accordance with law.
31. At this stage, Mr. Navare
submits that this Court
should extend the house
arrest of the Petitioner by
two more days since the
Supreme Court had itself
extended his house arrest for
four weeks. This submission
overlooks the fact that the
Supreme Court had extended the
Petitioner's house arrest only
in order to enable him to
avail of t h e r e m e d i e s t h a t
w e r e p e r m i s s i b l e t o h i m i n
a c c o r d a n c e w i t h l a w . A s f a r
a s t h e present Petitioner is
concerned, the fact that this
writ petition filed by him was
already pending before this
Court, was noticed by the
Supreme Court and it was made
clear t ha t he i s fr ee t o
p ur su e t hi s r em ed y a mo ng
o th er s in a cc or da nc e wi th
l aw . T he ex te ns io n o f h is
h ou se ar re st by th e S up re me
w as on ly fo r t ha t l im it ed
10
p ur po se . Consequently, this
Court is unable to accede to
the request of Mr. Navare.”
(Emphasis supplied)
6. The appellant filed Writ Petition No. 4425
of 2018 dated 05.10.2018 for quashing the FIR.
The High Court protected the appellant from
arrest during the pendency of the said Writ
Petition. Charge-sheet was filed against the
appellant’s co-accused on 15.11.2018. Then,
this is followed-up by a supplementary chargesheet against the co-accused on 21.02.2019. On
13.09.2019, the High Court of Bombay dismissed
the Writ Petition filed by appellant against
the FIR. The interim protection from arrest
was, however, extended by three weeks. The
Special Leave Petition filed by appellant, as
SLP (Criminal) No. 8862 of 2019, came to be
disposed of by acceding to the request of the
appellant that the appellant may apply for
11
anticipatory bail before the competent Court.
The Court extended the interim protection,
which was given to the appellant for another
period of four weeks, from 15.10.2019 and he
was given liberty to apply for
regular/anticipatory bail. The Application
seeking anticipatory bail came to be dismissed
by the Sessions Court by Order dated
12.11.2019.
7. The Appellant approached the High Court of
Bombay seeking anticipatory bail, which was
declined by Order dated 14.02.2020. However,
the High Court granted protection from arrest
for four weeks. The Special Leave Petition
filed, challenging the Order by the High Court,
came to be disposed of by Order dated
16.03.2020. By the said Order, this Court
dismissed the Special Leave Petition. In its
Order, this Court noticed that since the
12
appellant had enjoyed protection for
approximately one and a half years, three
weeks’ time was granted to surrender. It is,
thereafter, that on 08.04.2020, this Court
extended the time by a period of one week for
surrendering and, accordingly, on 14.04.2020,
the appellant surrendered before the NIA,
Delhi. On 15.04.2020, seven days police custody
was granted by the Sessions Court, New Delhi.
On 21.04.2020, the further remand of seven days
was ordered. Before the expiry of the
appellant’s policy custody, he was remanded to
judicial custody on 25.04.2020. The appellant
was transferred to Mumbai on 26.05.2020 and he
was remanded to judicial custody. It is,
thereafter, that the appellant moved for
default bail on 11.06.2020. In calculating the
period of custody for the purpose of filing the
Application for default bail, the appellant,
13
included the period of 34 days of house arrest
from 28.08.2018 to 01.10.2018. Further, eleven
days of custody with the NIA from 15.04.2020
till 25.04.2020 and forty-eight days in Tihar
Jail, Delhi and Taloja Jail, Mumbai from
25.04.2020 to 12.06.2020 (judicial custody),
were also added. The NIA, it would appear,
filed Application for extension of time to file
charge-sheet after 110 days of custody on
29.06.2020. The NIA Special Court, before which
the Application for default bail was moved,
rejected the Application on 12.07.2020. The
appellant preferred an Appeal before the High
Court of Bombay challenging the Order dated
12.07.2020. On 09.10.2020, the NIA filed the
charge-sheet against the appellant, inter alia.
By the impugned Order dated 08.02.2021, the
High Court of Bombay, dismissed the Appeal,
14
which was filed under Section 21 of the NIA
Act.
8. We heard Shri Kapil Sibal, learned Senior
Counsel as also Smt. Nitya Ramakrishnan,
learned Senior Counsel assisted by Shri Shadan
Farasat for the appellant and Shri S.V. Raju,
learned Additional Solicitor General, on behalf
of the respondent.
THE FINDINGS IN THE IMPUGNED ORDER
9. During the period of the house arrest, the
appellant was not supposed to meet anyone,
barring his lawyers and ordinary residents of
the house. He could not step out of the
premises. There were to be two Guards of the
Special Cell of Delhi Police outside the house.
The Investigating Agency/Investigating Officer
did not have any access to him or occasion to
interrogate him. The Transit Remand Order being
stayed, it could not be said that the appellant
15
was under the detention of the Police for
investigation. Under Section 167(2) of the Code
of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (hereinafter
referred to as ‘the CrPC’, for short), the
Magistrate has to authorise the detention.
The High Court having stayed the transit remand
and finally having set aside the transit
remand, thereby holding the detention to be
illegal, there was no authorised detention by
an Order of the Magistrate. Therefore, the
appellant cannot claim the benefit of default
bail. It is an indispensable requirement to
claim the benefit of default bail that the
detention of the accused has to be authorised
by the Magistrate. The authorisation by the
Magistrate having been declared illegal, the
detention itself was illegal. The said period
(house arrest custody) cannot be treated as
authorised custody under Section 167(2) of the
16
CrPC. The Court drew support from decision of
this Court which is reported in Chaganti
Satyanarayan & Ors. v. State of Andhra
Pradesh2, to hold that the period of 90 days
will commence only from the date of remand and
not from any anterior date in spite of the fact
that the accused may have been taken into
custody earlier. The Court held that it was not
possible for it to hold that every detention,
which may have resulted in deprivation of
liberty of the accused, to be an authorised
detention under Section 167(2) of the Cr.P.C.
Sans any valid authorisation of the Magistrate,
detaining the appellant, he was not entitled to
default bail. Thus, the Court took the view
that the period, when the appellant was under
the house arrest, i.e., 28.08.2018 to
01.10.2018, had to be excluded. After the High
Court of Delhi set aside the Transit Remand
2 (1986) 3 SCC 141
17
Order, it was noted that the appellant had
applied for anticipatory bail, which was
rejected at all stages and, ultimately, the
appellant surrendered only on 14.04.2020. It
was based on the said surrender that the
Magistrate authorised police custody.
SUBMISSIONS OF THE APPELLANT
10. The learned Senior Counsel for the
appellant contended that there is no substance
in the reasoning of the High Court that the
period of 34 days, during which, the appellant
was under house arrest, could not be included
within the period of 90 days, for the reason
that the Investigating Officer did not have
access to the appellant, and it is untenable.
It was contended that nothing prevented the
Officers from interrogating the
appellant/investigating the matter, if need be,
after obtaining the leave of the High Court of
18
Delhi. It the appellant’s contention that under
Section 167 of the CrPC, what is contemplated
is granting of such custody by the Magistrate,
as he thinks fit. The provision does not
contemplate access to the Police for
interrogation as a condition. It is pointed out
that it is open to the Magistrate and it is
often so done that right from the first day of
remand, what is granted is judicial custody,
wherein Police have no access to the accused.
However, such judicial custody is reckoned for
calculating the period for considering an
Application for default bail. Still further, it
is pointed out that under Section 43D(2)(b), of
UAPA Police Custody can be sought at any time.
It is further contended that there was no stay
of investigation. The two conditions required
for attracting Section 167 are pointed out to
be as follows: (a) A person is arrested under
19
Section 57 of the Cr.P.C. while investigating a
cognisable offence and (b) he is produced
before a Magistrate after his arrest. It is
contended that in the case of the appellant,
both the conditions were fulfilled having
regard to the fact that the appellant stood
arrested on 28.08.2018 and he was produced
before the Magistrate for the remand. It was
next contended that the fact that the High
Court of Delhi finally set aside the said
remand and held that the detention was illegal,
was an untenable ground to hold that there was
no remand under Section 167 of the CrPC.
Appellant lay store by the Order of the High
Court of Delhi, wherein it had concluded that
the house arrest of the appellant ‘comes to an
end as of now’. It is contended that the Court
has not treated the period of house arrest as
either nonest or void. Custody, it is pointed
20
out, was authorised by the Magistrate under
Section 167. It was extended by a modification
by the High Court and, thereafter, by this
Court. The High Court of Delhi, it is pointed
out, only stayed the transit and not the remand
Order. The Court only modified the nature of
the remand, i.e., from transit in Police
custody to within the confines of the
appellant’s house. The detention, being found
to be illegal, cannot wipe out the period of
detention. The Order of the High Court of
Delhi, providing for house arrest can only be
sourced from Section 167 of the CrPC. What is
required under Section 167 of the CrPC is the
total period of custody which can include
broken periods and the custody need not be one
continuous lot. It is contended that Section
167 does not distinguish between transit or
other remand. The remand, be it a transit
21
remand, has to be sourced to Section 167 of the
Cr.P.C. and there is no other provision for the
transit remand. The High Court has itself found
that appellant was in custody when he was under
the house arrest. It is then pointed out that
the High Court did not have any inherent power
to place a person in custody. In this case the
power can only, therefore, be what flows from
Section 167 of the CrPC. It is the Order of
transit remand which occasioned the custody. It
was contended that the High Court or any
superior Court can modify or change the nature
of the Magisterial remand. The modified nature
of the remand by the High Court of Delhi and
this Court was never set aside.
SUBMISSIONS OF THE RESPONDENT
11. Mr. S.V. Raju, learned Additional Solicitor
General would support the order of the High
Court:-
22
a. He points out that at the time when the
writ petition was filed in the High Court of
Delhi seeking a writ of habeas corpus, the
order of transit remand had not been passed
by the CMM, Saket.
b. In his application seeking for
anticipatory bail, the appellant had sought
through his pleadings to project the need to
be protected. The protection was granted
which was continued in various proceedings
as already noticed.
c. Reliance is placed on the bar under
Section 43(D)(4) of UAPA against the grant
of anticipatory bail.
d. He referred to paragraph 12 of the
order rejecting appellant’s plea for
anticipatory bail. It is pointed out that it
was the case of the appellant that this
Court had protected his liberty by granting
23
house arrest inter alia. The meat of the
matter is that it was understood by the
appellant himself that the house arrest was
a protection from custody and therefore it
could not be understood as custody within
the meaning of Section 167 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure. In short, house arrest
was permitted in exercise of the
extraordinary powers available to this
Court.
12. It is further pointed out that house arrest
according to the appellant itself was unknown
to the code. It is further the case of the
respondent that an accused who is remanded to
custody under Section 167 of the Cr.P.C. cannot
come out of the custody unless he is bailed out
or unless he is acquitted. There is no bail in
favour of the appellant. He was also not
remanded to judicial custody. The so-called
24
custody during the house arrest, in other
words, was not custody or detention within the
meaning of Section 167 of the Cr.P.C. It also
was not a police custody because the
investigating agency had no access to the
accused during this period. Thus, a period of
34 days in house arrest was neither judicial
custody nor police custody as provided in
Section 167 of the Cr.P.C. The order of the
High Court is relied upon to point out that the
Court contemplated that the house arrest came
to an end with the judgment. The fact that the
High Court did not grant bail when it
pronounced the judgment on 1.10.2018, would go
to show that it was not an order passed under
Section 167 of the Cr.P.C. The contention which
found favour with the High Court is reiterated,
namely, with its judgment on 01.10.2018, the
Court has set the clock back and treated the
25
arrest of the appellant as non-est. This is for
the reason that the appellant was not bailed
out. He was not placed in judicial custody.
With the house arrest coming to an end, the
appellant became a free person, entitled to
apply for anticipatory bail which he availed
of. The application for anticipatory bail
presupposes that the arrest on 28.08.2018 was
non-est since a person could not be arrested
for an offence twice. By refusing anticipatory
bail, the Courts including this Court permitted
the arrest of the appellant for the same
offences for which he was arrested earlier.
This indicates that the earlier proceedings
were treated as non-est for all practical
purposes. The surrender by the appellant
estopped the appellant from projecting the
house arrest as custody within the meaning of
Section 167 of the Cr.P.C. The order passed by
26
CMM, Saket was only an order for production and
not an order for detention in custody. Reading
Section 167 alongwith Sections 56 and 57 of the
Cr.P.C., it is pointed out that the order of
transit remand is to be understood as an order
extending the period of arrest of 24 hours for
the purpose of facilitating the production of
accused before the competent Magistrate which
in this case, was the competent Court located
at Pune. Sections 56, 57 and
167 is relied upon to contend that since there
is a duty to produce an arrested person within
24 hours, Section 57 provided for a special
order under Section 167 for such detention
beyond 24 hours for production of the accused
before the competent Court. Orders are
ordinarily passed under this Section 167 are
either orders of police remand or orders
remanding an accused to judicial custody. The
27
special order referred to in Section 57 is the
order forwarding the accused to a Magistrate
having jurisdiction to either try the case or
commit the accused. In a case where an accused
is presented before a Magistrate not having
such jurisdiction, the Magistrate has no
authority or power to remand an accused to
judicial custody. Therefore, the order of
transit remand is not an order for the purpose
of including the period in computing 90 days
and it is only a production order. At any rate,
it is pointed out that the order of Saket Court
(transit order), even if it is considered to be
an order under Section 167 of Cr.PC, it was
hardly in force for a couple of hours till the
Delhi High Court stayed the same around 4.00
p.m. on the very day. Even if this period of 1
day is included for the purpose of computing
the period of 90 days, the appellant would not
28
become entitled to default bail. It is further
the case of the respondent that the
interpretation adopted by the appellant would
render police custody under Section 167
illusory.
13. The investigating authorities would be
deprived of the opportunity for custodial
interrogation during the first 15 days or 30
days in case of UAPA offences. The
interpretation which frustrates a fair
investigation under the statute should be
avoided.
14. Act of Court should not negatively impact
the investigating agency- the maxim “Actus
curiae neminem gravabit” would apply in the
present case.
15. The order passed by the High Court of Delhi
in the writ petition seeking habeas corpus was
not an order under Section 167 of the Cr.P.C.
29
If the submission of the appellant is accepted,
it would mean that the appellant was remanded
to police custody after 30 days i.e., on
15.04.2020 and 21.04.2020. The appellant never
objected to the same. This clearly shows that
the present contention of the appellant is a
mere after thought. The period of arrest has
to be excluded and the period has to be
reckoned from the date of production. The
submission is based on the decision of this
Court in Chaganti Satyanarayana(supra). This is
after treating 15.04.2020 to be the date of
production.
ANALYSIS
16. Though the final question to be answered is
whether the period of 34 days spent in house
arrest by the appellant is to be counted
towards the period of 90 days under Section 167
30
Cr.P.C., several issues arise which we
articulate as follows:
1) What is the nature of an order of
transit remand? Is it an order passed under
Section 167 of the Cr.PC.?
2) What is the nature of the interim order
dated 28.08.2018 passed in the writ petition
by the appellant in the High Court of Delhi
as extended? Are these orders passed under
Section 167 of the Cr.P.C.?
3) What is the effect of the judgment of
the High Court of Delhi dated 1.10.2018
wherein the arrest of the appellant and the
transit remand are found illegal?
4) Does the House arrest of the appellant
amount to police custody or judicial
custody? Can there be an order for custody
other than police custody and judicial
custody under Section 167 Cr.P.C.? Is House
31
arrest custody within the embrace of Section
167 of Cr.P.C.?
5) Is the House arrest of the appellant
not custody under Section 167 of the Cr.P.C.
on the score that the appellant could not be
interrogated by the competent investigating
officer?
6) What is the effect of the appellant
being in police custody from 15.4.2020 till
25.4.2020 and the alleged acquiescence of
the appellant in the order and the custody
undergone by the appellant?
7) Whether broken periods of custody
otherwise traceable to Section 167 Cr.P.C.
suffice to piece together the total maximum
period of custody permitted beyond which the
right to default bail arises or whether the
law giver has envisaged only custody which
is continuous?
32
8) What is the impact of mandate of
Article 21 and Article 22 of the
Constitution?
17. Before we deal with the various issues, it
is necessary to note certain salient features
of the Constitution, Cr.P.C. and also Unlawful
Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA).
18. Article 21 of the Constitution incorporates
invaluable fundamental rights insofar as it
declares that no person shall be deprived of
his life or personal liberty except according
to procedure established by law. Article 22
(1) and (2) read as follows:
“2. Protection against arrest and
detention in certain cases
(1) No person who is arrested shall
be detained in custody without
being informed, as soon as may be,
of the grounds for such arrest nor
shall he be denied the right to
consult, and to be defended by, a
legal practitioner of his choice
33
(2) Every person who is arrested
and detained in custody shall be
produced before the nearest
magistrate within a period of
twenty-four hours of such arrest
excluding the time necessary for
the journey from the place of
arrest to the court of the
magistrate and no such person shall
be detained in custody beyond the
said period without the authority
of a magistrate”
19. Chapter V of the Cr.P.C. deals with “Arrest
of Persons”. Section 41 deals with situations
in which any police officer may arrest any
person without an order from a Magistrate or
without a warrant. Section 41 (1)(a) to 41 (1)
(d) provides for safeguards to avoid arbitrary
arrest and also confer certain rights on the
person arrested. They were inserted by Act 5
of 2009 with effect from 1.11.2010. Section
43 Cr.P.C. provides for power to arrest even by
a private person and the procedure to be
34
followed in such case. Section 48 Cr.P.C.
reads as follows:
“48. Pursuit of offenders into
other jurisdictions. A police
officer may, for the purpose of
arresting without warrant any
person whom he is authorised to
arrest, pursue such person into any
place in India.”
20. Sections 56 and 57 Cr.P.C. are also
relevant and we refer to the same.
“56. Person arrested to be taken
before Magistrate officer in charge
of police station. - A police
officer making an arrest without
warrant shall, without unnecessary
delay and subject to the provisions
herein contained as to bail, take
or send the person arrested before
a Magistrate having jurisdiction in
the case, or before the officer in
charge of a police station.
57. Person arrested not to be
detained more than twenty- four
hours. - No police officer shall
detain in custody a person arrested
without warrant for a longer period
than under all the circumstances of
the case is reasonable, and such
period shall not, in the absence of
35
a special order of a Magistrate
under section 167, exceed twentyfour hours exclusive of the time
necessary for the journey from the
place of arrest to the Magistrate'
s Court.”
21. Chapter VI deals with Processes to compel
Appearance. Part A of Chapter VI deals with
Summons. Part B deals with Warrant of arrest.
Warrant of arrest contemplated are those issued
by a court under Cr.P.C. Section 76 Cr.P.C.
reads as follows:
“76. Person arrested to be brought
before Court without delay. The
police officer or other person
executing a warrant of arrest shall
(subject to the provisions of
section 71 as to security) without
unnecessary delay bring the person
arrested before the Court before
which he is required by law to
produce such person:
Provided that such delay shall not,
in any case, exceed twenty- four
hours exclusive of the time
necessary for the journey from the
place of arrest to the Magistrate's
Court.”
36
22. Under Section 77 Cr.P.C., a warrant of
arrest may be executed at any place in India.
Chapter XII deals with Information to the
Police and their Powers to Investigate. The
mandatory duty of police officer to register
first information report has been elaborately
considered by a Constitution Bench of this
Court in the decision reported in Lalita
Kumari vs . Government of Uttar Pradesh and
others3.
23. Section 156 Cr.P.C. reads as follows:
“156. Police officer' s power to
investigate cognizable case.
(1) Any officer in charge of a
police station may, without the
order of a Magistrate, investigate
any cognizable case which a Court
having jurisdiction over the local
area within the limits of such
station would have power to inquire
into or try under the provisions of
Chapter XIII.
(2) No proceeding of a police
officer in any such case shall at
3 (2014) 2 SCC 1
37
any stage be called in question on
the ground that the case was one
which such officer was not
empowered under this section to
investigate.
(3) Any Magistrate empowered under
section 190 may order such an
investigation as above- mentioned.”
24. Under Section 156 Cr.P.C., any police
officer in charge of a police station can
without order of a Magistrate investigate any
cognizable case which a court having
jurisdiction over the local area within the
limits of such station have the power to try.
Section 157 deals with Procedure for
investigation. The said provision contemplates
inter alia the power to proceed, to the spot,
to investigate the facts and circumstance of
the case, and if necessary, take measures for
the discovery and arrest of the offender. It
is also pertinent to notice Section 167 Cr.P.C.
It reads as under:
38
“167. Procedure when
investigation cannot be completed
in twenty-four hours.—(1) Whenever
any person is arrested and detained
in custody, and it appears that the
investigation cannot be completed
within the period of twenty-four
hours fixed by Section 57, and
there are grounds for believing
that the accusation or information
is well-founded, the officer in
charge of the police station or the
police officer making the
investigation, if he is not below
the rank of sub-inspector, shall
forthwith transmit to the nearest
Judicial Magistrate a copy of the
entries in the diary hereinafter
prescribed relating to the case,
and shall at the same time forward
the accused to such Magistrate.
(2) The Magistrate to whom an
accused person is forwarded under
this section may, whether he has or
has not jurisdiction to try the
case, from time to time, authorise
the detention of the accused in
such custody as such Magistrate
thinks fit, for a term not
exceeding fifteen days in the
whole; and if he has no
jurisdiction to try the case or
39
commit it for trial, and considers
further detention unnecessary, he
may order the accused to be
forwarded to a Magistrate having
such jurisdiction:
Provided that—
[(a) the Magistrate may authorise
the detention of the accused
person, otherwise than in the
custody of the police, beyond the
period of fifteen days, if he is
satisfied that adequate grounds
exist for doing so, but no
Magistrate shall authorise the
detention of the accused person in
custody under this paragraph for a
total period exceeding, —
(i) ninety days, where the
investigation relates to an offence
punishable with death, imprisonment
for life or imprisonment for a term
of not less than ten years;
(ii) sixty days, where the
investigation relates to any other
offence, and, on the expiry of the
said period of ninety days, or
sixty days, as the case may be, the
accused person shall be released on
bail if he is prepared to and does
furnish bail, and every person
released on bail under this subsection shall be deemed to be so
released under the provisions of
40
Chapter XXXIII for the purposes of
that Chapter;]
[(b) no Magistrate shall authorise
detention of the accused in custody
of the police under this section
unless the accused is produced
before him in person for the first
time and subsequently every time
till the accused remains in the
custody of the police, but the
Magistrate may extend further
detention in judicial custody on
production of the accused either in
person or through the medium of
electronic video linkage;]
(c) no Magistrate of the second
class, not specially empowered in
this behalf by the High Court,
shall authorise detention in the
custody of the police.
[Explanation I.—For the
avoidance of doubts, it is hereby
declared that, notwithstanding the
expiry of the period specified in
paragraph (a), the accused shall be
detained in custody so long as he
does not furnish bail.]
[Explanation II. —If any
question arises whether an accused
person was produced before the
Magistrate as required under clause
(b), the production of the accused
person may be proved by his
41
signature on the order authorising
detention or by the order certified
by the Magistrate as to production
of the accused person through the
medium of electronic video linkage,
as the case may be:]
[Provided further that in case
of a woman under eighteen years of
age, the detention shall be
authorised to be in the custody of
a remand home or recognised social
institution.]
[(2-A) Notwithstanding anything
contained in sub-section (1) or
sub-section (2), the officer in
charge of the police station or the
police officer making the
investigation, if he is not below
the rank of a sub-inspector, may,
where a Judicial Magistrate is not
available, transmit to the nearest
Executive Magistrate, on whom the
powers of a Judicial Magistrate, or
Metropolitan Magistrate have been
conferred, a copy of the entry in
the diary hereinafter prescribed
relating to the case, and shall, at
the same time, forward the accused
to such Executive Magistrate, and
thereupon such Executive
Magistrate, may, for reasons to be
recorded in writing, authorise the
42
detention of the accused person in
such custody as he may think fit
for a term not exceeding seven days
in the aggregate; and, on the
expiry of the period of detention
so authorised, the accused person
shall be released on bail except
where an order for further
detention of the accused person has
been made by a Magistrate competent
to make such order; and, where an
order for such further detention is
made, the period during which the
accused person was detained in
custody under the orders made by an
Executive Magistrate under this
sub-section, shall be taken into
account in computing the period
specified in paragraph (a) of the
proviso to sub-section (2):
Provided that before the expiry
of the period aforesaid, the
Executive Magistrate shall transmit
to the nearest Judicial Magistrate
the records of the case together
with a copy of the entries in the
diary relating to the case which
was transmitted to him by the
officer in charge of the police
station or the police officer
making the investigation, as the
case may be.]
43
(3) A Magistrate authorising
under this section detention in the
custody of the police shall record
his reasons for so doing.
(4) Any Magistrate other than the
Chief Judicial Magistrate making
such order shall forward a copy of
his order, with his reasons for
making it to the Chief Judicial
Magistrate.
(5) If in any case triable by
Magistrate as a summons-case, the
investigation is not concluded
within a period of six months from
the date on which the accused was
arrested, the Magistrate shall make
an order stopping further
investigation into the offence
unless the officer making the
investigation satisfies the
Magistrate that for special reasons
and in the interests of justice the
continuation of the investigation
beyond the period of six months is
necessary.
(6) Where any order stopping
further investigation into an
offence has been made under subsection (5), the Sessions Judge
may, if he is satisfied, on an
44
application made to him or
otherwise, that further
investigation into the offence
ought to be made, vacate the order
made under sub-section (5) and
direct further investigation to be
made into the offence subject to
such directions with regard to bail
and other matters as he may
specify.”
25. Section 43(D) (2) of UAPA provides for the
modified application of Section 167.
26. In State of Punjab v. Ajaib Singh4, the
court had to deal with ambit of Article of
22(1) and also the scope of the expression
“arrest” contained therein.
“16. Broadly speaking, arrests
may be classified into two
categories, namely, arrests under
warrants issued by a court and
arrests otherwise than under such
warrants. As to the first category
of arrest, Sections 75 to 86
collected under sub-heading “BWarrant of Arrest” in Chapter VI of
the Code of Criminal Procedure deal
with arrests in execution of
warrants issued by a court under
4 AIR 1953 SC 10
45
that Code. Section 75 prescribes
that such a warrant must be in
writing signed by the presiding
officer, or in the case of a Bench
of Magistrates, by any Member of
such Bench and bear the seal of the
court. Form No. II of Schedule V to
the Code is a form of warrant for
the arrest of an accused person.
The warrant quite clearly has to
state that the person to be
arrested stands charged with a
certain offence. Form No. VII of
that Schedule is used to bring up a
witness. The warrant itself recites
that the court issuing it has good
and sufficient reason to believe
that the witness will not attend as
a witness unless compelled to do
so. The point to be noted is that
in either case the warrant ex facie
sets out the reason for the arrest,
namely, that the person to be
arrested has committed or is
suspected to have committed or is
likely to commit some offence. In
short, the warrant contains a clear
accusation against the person to be
arrested. Section 80 requires that
the police officer or other person
executing a warrant must notify the
substance thereof to the person to
be arrested, and, if so required,
shall show him the warrant. It is
thus abundantly clear that the
person to be arrested is informed
of the grounds for his arrest
before he is actually arrested.
46
Then comes Section 81 which runs
thus:
“The police officer or other
person executing a warrant of
arrest shall (subject to the
provisions of Section 76 as to
security) without unnecessary delay
bring the person arrested before
the court before which he is
required by law to produce such
person.”
17. Apart from the Code of
Criminal Procedure, there are other
statutes which provide for arrest
in execution of a warrant of arrest
issued by a court. To take one
example, Order 38 Rule 1 of the
Code of Civil Procedure authorises
the court to issue a warrant for
the arrest of a defendant before
judgment in certain circumstances.
Form No. 1 in Appendix F sets out
the terms of such a warrant. It
clearly recites that it has been
proved to the satisfaction of the
court that there is probable cause
for belief that the Defendant 1s
about to do one or other of the
things mentioned in Rule 1. The
court may under Section 55 read
with Order 21 Rule 38, issue a
warrant for the arrest of the
judgment-debtor in execution of the
decree. Form 13 sets out the terms
of such a warrant. The warrant
recites the decree and the failure
of the judgment-debtor to pay the
47
decretal amount to the decreeholder and directs the bailiff of
the court to arrest the defaulting
judgment-debtor, unless he pays up
the decretal amount with costs and
to bring him before the court with
all convenient speed. The point to
be noted is that, as in the case of
a warrant of arrest issued by a
court under the Code of Criminal
Procedure, a warrant of arrest
issued by a court under the Code of
Civil Procedure quite plainly
discloses the reason for the arrest
in that it sets out an accusation
of default, apprehended or actual,
and that the person to be arrested
is made acquainted with the reasons
for his arrest before he is
actually arrested.”
Also in para 20, this Court laid down as
follows:-
“20. Turning now to Article 22(1)
and (2), we have to ascertain
whether its protection extends to
both categories of arrests
mentioned above, and, if not, then
which one of them comes within its
protection. There can be no manner
of doubt that arrests without
warrants issued by a court call for
greater protection than do arrests
under such warrants. The provision
that the arrested person should
48
within 24 hours be produced before
the nearest Magistrate is
particularly desirable in the case
of arrest otherwise than under a
warrant issued by the court, for it
ensures the immediate application
of a judicial mind to the legal
authority of the person making the
arrest and the regularity of the
procedure adopted by him. In the
case of arrest under a warrant
issued by a court, the judicial
mind had already been applied to
the case when the warrant was
issued and, therefore, there is
less reason for making such
production in that case a matter of
a substantive fundamental right. It
is also perfectly plain that the
language of Article 22(2) has been
practically copied from Sections 60
and 61 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure which admittedly
prescribe the procedure to be
followed after a person has been
arrested without warrant. The
requirement of Article 22(1) that
no person who is arrested shall be
detained in custody without being
informed, as soon as may be, of the
grounds for such arrest indicates
that the clause really contemplates
an arrest without a warrant of
court, for, as already noted, a
person arrested under a court's
warrant is made acquainted with the
grounds of his arrest before the
arrest is actually effected. There
49
can be no doubt that the right to
consult a legal practitioner of his
choice is to enable the arrested
person to be advised about the
legality or sufficiency of the
grounds for his arrest. The right
of the arrested person to be
defended by a legal practitioner of
his choice postulates that there is
an accusation against him against
which he has to be defended. The
language of Article 22(1) and (2)
indicates that the fundamental
right conferred by it gives
protection against such arrests as
are effected otherwise than under a
warrant issued by a court on the
allegation or accusation that the
arrested person has, or is
suspected to have, committed, or is
about or likely to commit an act of
a criminal or quasi-criminal nature
or some activity prejudicial to the
public or the State interest. In
other words, there is indication in
the language of Article 22(1) and
(2) that it was designed to give
protection against the act of the
executive or other non-judicial
authority. The Blitz case (Petition
No. 75 of 1952), on which Sri
Dadachanji relies, proceeds on this
very view, for there the arrest was
made on a warrant issued, not by a
court, but, by the Speaker of State
Legislature and the arrest was made
on the distinct accusation of the
arrested person being guilty of
50
contempt of the legislature. It is
not, however, our purpose, nor do
we consider it desirable, to
attempt a precise and meticulous
enunciation of the scope and ambit
of this fundamental right or to
enumerate exhaustively the cases
that come within its protection.
Whatever else may come within the
purview of Article 22(1) and (2),
suffice it to say for the purposes
of this case, that we are satisfied
that the physical restraint put
upon an abducted person in the
process of recovering and taking
that person into custody without
any allegation or accusation of any
actual or suspected or apprehended
commission by that person of any
offence of a criminal or quasicriminal nature or of any act
prejudicial to the State or the
public interest, and delivery of
that person to the custody of the
officer in charge of the nearest
camp under Section 4 of the
impugned Act cannot be regarded as
arrest and detention within the
meaning of Article 22(1) and (2).
In our view, the learned Judges of
the High Court over-simplified the
matter while construing the
article, possibly because the
considerations hereinbefore
adverted to were not pointedly
brought to their attention.”
[Emphasis supplied]
51
27. It will be noted that with the proviso in
the Cr.P.C., 1973, in Section 76, in the case
of arrest under a warrant, the person is to be
produced before the Court within 24 hours with
the exclusion of time taken for travelling.
Such a proviso was absent in Section (81) of
the Cr.P.C., 1898 which was considered by the
Court.
28. In State of U.P. v. Abdul Samad5, the
respondents who were husband and wife were
arrested for non-compliance with the order of
deportation passed against them. They were sent
to Amritsar for being deported to Pakistan.
They were produced before the Magistrate on
23rd July, 1960 at 10.00 A.M. who ordered them
to be kept in the Civil Lines Police Station.
They were brought back to Lucknow on the 25th
July 1960 based on a message from the High
5 AIR 1962 SC 1506
52
Court of Allahabad requiring their production
and they were produced before the Deputy
Registrar, High Court who directed them to be
produced on the next day of the morning. The
court which was dealing with the writ of Habeas
Corpus by the respondents directed the
respondents be produced the next day. On 28th
July 1960, the High court focussing on the
second period i.e. 25th July 1960 to 2.00 p.m.
27th July, 1960 found that during this period
the respondents having not being produced
before a Magistrate within 24 hours of the
commencement of the custody the detention was
found to be violative of Article 22(2). It is
on these facts the majority (Justice K. Subba
Roa -dissenting)held as follows:
“….It is very difficult to
appreciate what exactly either of
the learned Judges had in mind in
making these observations holding
that the guarantee under Article
22(2) had been violated. During the
53
“second stage” at which the learned
Judges held that the detention has
been illegal because of a violation
of Article 22(2), the facts were
these: The respondents had been
brought back to Lucknow on a
message requiring their production
before the High Court. They reached
Lucknow on the 25th at 1 p.m. and
were produced at 3 p.m. the same
day i.e. within two hours of
reaching Lucknow before the Deputy
Registrar. The Deputy Registrar had
directed their production the next
day and they were accordingly so
produced. Even taking it that the
Deputy Registrar was not a judicial
authority such as the learned
Judges had in mind, the respondents
had been produced on 26th morning
at 10.15 a.m. before the learned
Judges when they were at liberty to
make any order regarding the
custody which they considered
proper and the time when they were
produced before the Judges was
admittedly not beyond 24 hours from
the time the respondents reached
Lucknow. On the 26th the learned
Judges who took part in the final
decision passed an order directing
the production of the respondents
on July 27, 1960 at 2 p.m. which
obviously permitted the previous
custody to be continued till
further orders. They were produced
accordingly at 2 p.m. on that day
and by a further order of July 27,
54
1960 the learned Judges had
directed the release of the
respondents on bail and in
pursuance of this order the
respondents had been released on
July 27, 1960 itself. In these
circumstances we are at a loss to
understand which is the period
during “the second stage” or “on
the 27th”, when the respondents
could be said to have been
illegally detained for more than 24
hours without production before a
judicial authority as required by
Article 22(2). We would add that
even if Article 22(2) were
construed to require that a person
arrested and detained has to be
produced before a Magistrate every
24 hours during his detention, a
meaning which it assuredly cannot
bear, though it is not clear to us
whether the learned Judges did not
understand the article to require
this, even such a requirement was
satisfied in this case as the
respondents were during “the second
stage” produced before the High
Court itself “for suitable orders”
on the 26th and again on the 27th.
We have no desire to comment
further on this judgment of the
learned Judges except to say that
there was no justification
whatsoever for the finding on the
basis of which the learned Judges
directed the release of the
respondents.”
55
[Emphasis
supplied]
29. The aforesaid reasoning is not inapposite
in the context of Respondent’s case that only a
Magistrate can authorize detention under
Section 167 Cr.PC.
PROCEEDINGS IN THE HIGH COURT OF DELHI
30. The writ petition filed by the appellant
was mentioned before the Chief Justice of the
Court on 28.08.2018 at 2:15 p.m. From the
judgment, it is further clear that it was taken
up at 2:45 p.m. on the same day. The Court
initially ordered that ‘no precipitate action
be taken’ of removing the appellant till the
matter was taken up again at 4:00 p.m. In the
meantime, it would appear that in the transit
remand application moved by the Maharashtra
police, the CMM, Saket passed the order on the
56
transit remand application which we have
extracted.
31. We have also noticed the contents of the
order which was passed at 4:00 p.m. on
28.08.2018. The perusal of the judgment
further reveals that the counsel for the state
of Maharashtra, in fact, raised the preliminary
objection to the maintainability of the writ.
It reads as follows: -
“6. Mr. Vinay Navare, learned
counsel appearing for the State of
Maharashtra, raised a preliminary
objection to the maintainability of
the present writ petition relying
on the recent judgment dated
5
th September 2018 of a three judge
bench of the Supreme Court in Crl.
A. 1124 of 2018 (State of
Maharashtra v. Tasneem Rizwan
Siddiquee). He submitted that the
Supreme Court has, in said
decision, reiterated the settled
position in law, as explained in
the decisions in Manubhai Ratilal
Patel v. State of Gujarat, (2013) 1
SCC 314 and Saurabh
Kumar v. Jailor, Koneil
Jail, (2014) 13 SCC 436, that once
57
a person is in judicial custody
pursuant to a remand order passed
by a magistrate in connection with
an offence under investigation, a
writ of habeas corpus is not
maintainable.”
32. The High Court tides over this objection by
holding as follows: -
“9. On the question of the
maintainability of the present
petition, as already noticed
earlier, this Court had even prior
to the learned CMM passing the
order on the remand application
directed at around 2.45 pm on
28th August 2018 that “no further
precipitate action of removing the
Petitioner from Delhi be taken till
the matter be again taken up at 4
pm.” Mr. Rahul Mehra, learned
Standing Counsel for the State (NCT
of Delhi) informed the Court that
he had conveyed the aforementioned
interim order to the concerned
police officials at 2.54 pm on
28th August 2018. While it is not
clear if the learned CMM was
actually informed of this Court's
interim order, the arrest memo of
the Petitioner shows that he was
arrested at 2.15 pm at his
58
residence in Nehru Enclave. Given a
reasonable time taken to reach the
Saket Court complex, it is unlikely
that the learned CMM heard the
matter, perused the remand
application and then passed the
order before 2.45 pm, i.e. before
this Court passed the interim
order.
10. Consequently, when the
present habeas corpus petition was
entertained and the above interim
order was passed by this Court,
there was no order of the learned
CMM granting transit remand of the
Petitioner. In each of the
aforementioned decisions cited by
Mr. Navlakha the entertaining of
the habeas corpus petition by the
High Court was subsequent to the
transit remand order passed by the
concerned Judicial Magistrate. This
one factor distinguishes the
present case from the above cases.
Consequently, this Court rejects
the preliminary objection raised by
Mr. Navakre as to the
maintainability of the present writ
petition.”
33. The High Court, thereafter, proceeded to
find that even before a Magistrate, before whom
59
the transit remand application is filed, the
mandatory requirement of Section 167 is that
the entries in the case diary should be
produced, is applicable. He is required to
apply his mind to ensure there exists material
in the form of entries to justify the prayer
for transit remand. While the Magistrate
examining the transit remand application is not
required to go into the adequacy of the
material, he is obliged to satisfy himself from
about the existence of the material. He further
found that the Magistrate is bound to ask the
arrested person whether in fact, he has been
informed about the grounds of arrest and
whether he requires to consult and be defended
by any legal practitioner of his choice.
Though, a duty lawyer empanelled under the
Legal Services Authority Act, 1987 was shown
representing the appellant, the High Court
60
noticed that the Magistrate did not ask the
counsel of the arrested person whether he was
informed about the grounds of arrest and
whether he asked to consult and be defended by
the legal practitioner of his choice. The High
Court emphasized that this requirement does not
get diluted only because the proceedings are
for transit remand. It was found be the mandate
under Article 22(1) of the Constitution. The
appearance of the duty lawyer was found to be
essentially cosmetic and not in the true spirit
of Article 22(1). The materials in the case
diary were found to be written in the Marathi
language. It was found undisputed that the
Magistrate was not conversant with the Marathi
language. This disabled the Magistrate from
appreciating whether the requirements under
Section 41(1)(b)(a) of the Cr.P.C. stood
satisfied. It is thereafter noticed that the
61
Court disposed of the writ petition with the
findings and the directions as noted in
paragraphs 28, 29, 30 and 31 which we have
already extracted.
34. The SLP against the judgment was disposed
of as follows on 11.08.2020:
“Heard the learned Solicitor
General and the learned counsel
appearing in the matter at length.
The learned Solicitor General has
submitted that the High Court
should not have interfered in the
matter and the order should not
have been passed and it is palpably
illegal. Ms. Nithya Ramakrishnan,
learned counsel, has submitted that
the order is absolutely correct and
there is no ground to make any
interference in the order.
Be that as it may, the exercise is
academic in nature and the accused
have surrendered on 14.04.2020,
pursuant to the order passed by
this Court on 08.04.2020. We do not
propose to go into the rival
submissions, as the petitions have
been rendered infructuous for
practical purposes.
However, we direct that the
impugned order shall not be treated
62
as a precedent for any other case,
questions of law are kept open.
The Special Leave Petitions and the
pending interlocutory
application(s), if any, is/are
disposed of.”
NATURE OF HOUSE ARREST
35. The High Court in the impugned order has
itself found that the period of 34 days spent
in house arrest by the appellant amounted to
custody. We, however, consider it necessary to
articulate our views regarding the nature of
house arrest.
36. In an article “A Brief History of House
Arrest and Electronic Monitoring” by J. Robert
Lilly and Richard A. Ball, we find the
following discussion:-
63
“HOME CONFINEMENT "House arrest"
has a long history dating at least
to St. Paul the Apostle, who is
reported to have been placed under
"house arrest" (custodia libera) in
Rome at about the age of 60. St.
Paul's sentence lasted two years
during which time he paid rent and
earned his keep as a tent maker,
thus avoiding becoming a ward of
the church or state. While it would
go far beyond the historical record
to claim that St. Paul was the
first person to pay for his keep
under conditions of house arrest,
it is interesting to note that many
of today's "house arrest" programs
expect their clients to pay
supervision fees, restitution, and
their living expenses. Galileo
Galilei, the Florentine
philosopher, physicist, and
astronomer, also experienced "house
arrest" after a "second
condemnation" trial in Rome in
1633. After the trial, he returned
to Florence and house arrest for
the rest of his life. More
recently, Czar Nicholas II of
Russia and his family were kept
under house arrest in 1917 until
their deaths in 1918. This history
is a cause for concern among some
because of the traditional use of
the practice as a means of
silencing political dissent. South
Africa, for example, has a long
history of control through
64
"banning" and societies found in
Poland, South Korea, India, and the
Soviet Union are known to employ
"house arrest" primarily to deal
with troublesome political
dissenters. On the other hand,
France introduced the concept of
control judiciare in 1970 as a
fairly straightforward form of pretrial detention involving a
provision that employed home
confinement as an alternative for
common offenders. In 1975, Italy
initiated a policy of affidamento
in provo ai servizio sociale (trial
custody), which may be described as
a form of parole following a shock
period of three months
incarceration. Other European
countries have also experimented
with some manner of home
confinement as a means of dealing
with a variety of offenders. The
traditional use of "house arrest"
should not in itself become a
rationale for rejecting it. In the
United States, "home detention" had
been put in practice in St. Louis
as early as 1971.
Home confinement as a policy for
use with adult offenders began to
draw more attention in 1983 with
the delivery of two different
papers on the subject, passage of
the Correctional Reform Act, and
the use of an "electronic bracelet"
to monitor compliance with home
confinement on the part of an
65
offender in New Mexico. The latter
was inspired by a New Mexico
district court judge, who read a
comic strip where "Spiderman" was
being tracked by a transmitter
fixed to his wrist. The judge
approached an engineer, who
designed a device consisting of an
electronic bracelet approximately
the size of a pack of cigarettes
that emitted an electronic signal
that was picked up by a receiver
placed in a home telephone. This
bracelet could be strapped to the
ankle of an offender in such a way
that if he or she moved more than
approximately 150 feet from the
home telephone, the transmission
signal would be broken, alerting
authorities that the offender had
left the premises. Officials in New
Mexico gave approval for trial use
of the device and a research
project funded by the National
Institute of Justice eventually
reported successful results with
this "electronic monitoring."
37. In the United States, in December 1985, one
Ms. Murphy stood convicted in a case of
insurance fraud. She could have been packed off
to a jail for a maximum period of 50 years.
Instead, the Federal Judge placed her under
66
house arrest (See 108 F.R.D. 437, 439 (E.D.N.Y.
1985). This is what the Federal Judge inter
alia ordered: -
“The sentencing of Maureen Murphy
requires, in the court's opinion, a
sentence not heretofore used in
this District and almost never used
in the country in the federal
court. It is used elsewhere in the
world and is considered by some to
be highly objectionable. The
difference, however, is that in
other countries it is used to
repress political dis- sent and
before trial. Here it will be used
after a full trial where the
defendant has been found guilty of
a serious offense. The penalty is
house arrest.”
She was allowed to leave her apartment only for
medical reasons, employment, religious services
or to conduct essential food shopping. House
arrest has been employed in the United States
essentially as an intermediate level penal
sanction. In other words, upon being found
guilty instead of sentencing the convict to a
67
term in prison and in lieu of incarceration, as
a condition of probation, the convict is
compelled to confine himself to his place of
residence. Interestingly, consistent with the
constitutional protection afforded under United
States constitution, the house arrest does not
visit the convict with an absolute restriction
from leaving his home. In the article “House
Arrest”, a critical analysis of an intermediate
level penal sanction by Jeffrey N. Hurwitz, we
notice the following:-
“House arrest is a form of
intensive law enforcement
supervision characterized by
confinement to the offender’s place
of residence with permission to
leave only for explicit, preauthorized purposes. Generally, it
is imposed as a penal sanction in
lieu of incarceration and mandated
by the sentencing judge as a
condition of probation. In
Florida, however, house arrest is
considered a criminal sanction
entirely separate from probation.
In addition, at least one
jurisdiction has reported using
68
house arrest for individuals who
have been released on their own
recognizance while awaiting trial.
For example, a number of states and
counties have recently added
intensive supervision to probation
programs in order to provide an
intermediate punishment in lieu of
incarceration for selected
offenders. Many of the reported
conditions of intensive supervision
strategies are similar or even
identical to those imposed as part
of the house arrest sanction. For
example, multiple weekly contacts
between offenders and probation
officers, as well as mandatory
employment, may be common to both
control techniques.
The unique restriction on the
offender’s freedom to leave home is
the distinguishing feature of the
house arrest sanction. Although
other heightened surveillance
sanctions generally include strict
curfews, house arrest allows the
offender to leave her residence
only for specific purposes, unless
time spent away from home is used
for pre-authorized ends, the
offender risks detention and
incarceration.
The Florida Community Control
statute mandates that the court
impose “intensive supervision and
surveillance for an offender placed
into community control, which may
69
include … confinement to an agreedupon residence during hours away
from employment and public service
activities. The Florida law has
classified three tiers of
permissible travel, ranked
according to the purposes for
spending time away from the site of
confinement. “Essential travel”
includes travel for work, religious
expression, vocational or
educational training, selfimprovement programming, public
service, and scheduled appointments
with the supervising officer.
Movement from the home oriented
toward “the fulfilment of the basic
needs of the community controllee”
is considered “acceptable travel.
All three types of travel must be
approved in advance, although
movements for family emergencies
may occur without pre-authorization
provided that they are reported no
later than the following day.”
We may also notice the following discussion in
the said article: -
“While the conditions of house
arrest imposed in Murphy are
highly restrictive, another
federally imposed home confinement
pro- gram establishes even greater
control. In United States v.
Wayte3 the defendant was
70
convicted for failure to register
with the Selective Service
System." The imposition of
sentence was suspended and the
defendant was placed on probation
for six months. The court ordered
that the entire probationary
period be spent under house arrest
at the residence of Wayte's
grandmother, and that Wayte be
allowed to leave his site of
confinement only for "emergency
purposes with the permission of
the probation officer."3" The
house arrest regime in Wayte is
the most restrictive yet reported. Because Wayte is unable to
leave home at all, he is precluded
from obtaining outside employment.
All travel from his site of
confinement must be only in
response to a life-threatening
crisis; apparently, even movement
for religious expression must be
approved by the probation officer
as an emergency. He is
functionally isolated and removed
from the outside world, as if he
were incarcerated, his wife acts
as his intermediary with the
community.”
38. In the caption “the goals of house arrest”,
we notice the following discussion: -
71
“Yet house arrest, generally
imposed as a special condition of
probation, includes a distinctly
retributive component.42 The
sentencing court in Murphy describes the incorporation of
retribution, humiliation, and
deterrence into the traditionally
palliative scheme of probation:
There will be some people who
will believe that this sentence
is much too lenient. Others will
believe it too humiliating.
Public humiliation is a part of
the punishment .... In many
respects the colonial use of
stocks and the equivalent
punishment in other societies
served a useful goal in providing
swift social disapproval as a
deterrent. It is obvious that
some form of this disapproval is
required under modern
conditions.”
39. Among the advantages which have been
perceived in promoting the house arrest, have
been avoidance of overcrowding of the prisons
and also cost saving. However, concerns have
also emerged in regard to the issues arising
out of the proper supervision of house arrest.
72
40. The said article goes on to describe house
arrest as a community based probationary
sanction. We may also notice the following
discussion under the heading of waiver and
probation being an act of grace: -
“Moreover, because of the
particularly restrictive nature
of home confinement, the
implicated constitutional right
might not be waivable. For
example, if a confinee’s housing
is substandard, home confinement
imposed by the state may violate
the eighth amendment ban on cruel
and unusual punishment.
Similarly, it is likely that the
offender might sacrifice a right
that is not alienable to the
state. If a regime of home
confinement does not include
access to a house of worship, the
state will have coerced from the
offender a waiver or transfer of
the inalienable right to freedom
of worship guaranteed by the free
exercise clause of the first
amendment.
[Refer to decision by EC. Also
refer to Russian.]”
73
41. It will be noticed that ordinarily in the
United States, house arrest is ordered after
the trial is conducted and an accused is found
guilty. No doubt, it has also been resorted in
respect of juveniles even during the pendency
of the proceedings against him.
42. In Buzadji v. Moldova; 398 Butterworths
Human Rights Cases 42, the European Court of
Human Rights (Grand Chamber), was dealing with
a case against the Republic of Moldova lodged
under Article 34 of the Convention for the
Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental
Freedoms, 1950. Dealing with the questions,
whether the applicant is deprived of liberty
and whether the applicant had waived his right
to liberty, inter alia, the Court held as
follows:-
“As it does in many other areas,
the court insists in its case law
on an autonomous interpretation of
74
the notion of deprivation of
liberty. A systematic reading of
the Convention shows that mere
restrictions on the liberty of
movement are not covered by art 5
but fall under art 2(1) of Protocol
No 4. However, the distinction
between the restriction of movement
and the deprivation of liberty is
merely one of degree or intensity,
and not one of nature or substance.
In order to determine whether
someone has been ‘deprived of his
liberty’ within the meaning of art
5, the starting point must be the
concrete situation and account must
be taken of a whole range of
criteria such as the type,
duration, effects and manner of
implementation of the measure in
question (see Guzzardi v Italy
(1980) 3 EHRR 333, [1980] ECHR
7367/76, paras 92–93).
According to the court’s case law
(see, among many others, Mancini v
Italy (App no 44955/98) (judgment,
2 August), para 17; Lavents v
Latvia (App no 58442/00) (judgment,
28 November 2002), paras 64–66;
Nikolova v Bulgaria (No 2) [2004]
ECHR 40896/98, para 60; Ninescu v
Moldova (App no 47306/07)
(judgment, 15 July 2014), para 53;
and Delijorgji v Albania [2015]
ECHR 6858/11, para 75), house
arrest is considered, in view of
its degree and intensity, to amount
to deprivation of liberty within
75
the meaning of art 5 of the
Convention.
In Storck v Germany (2005) 43 EHRR
96, [2005] ECHR 61603/00, para 75
the court held that the right to
liberty is too important in a
‘democratic society’ within the
meaning of the Convention for a
person to lose the benefit of the
protection of the Convention for
the sole reason that he gives
himself up to be taken into
detention. Detention might violate
art 5 even though the person
concerned might have agreed to it
(see De Wilde v Belgium (1971) 1
EHRR 373, [1971] ECHR 2832/66, para
65).”
We may also notice:-
“The government submitted that
lesser reasons were required in
order to justify house arrest than
detention in an ordinary remand
facility because the former measure
was more lenient than the latter.
It is true that in most cases house
arrest implies fewer restrictions
and a lesser degree of suffering or
inconvenience for the detainee than
ordinary detention in prison. That
is the case because detention in
custody requires integrating the
individual into a new and sometimes
76
hostile environment, sharing of
activities and resources with other
inmates, observing discipline and
being subjected to supervision of
varying degrees by the authorities
twenty-four hours a day. For
example, detainees cannot freely
choose when to go to sleep, when to
take their meals, when to attend to
their personal hygiene needs or
when to perform outdoor exercise or
other activities. Therefore, when
faced with a choice between
imprisonment in a detention
facility and house arrest, as in
the present case, most individuals
would normally opt for the latter.
However, the court notes that no
distinction of regime between
different types of detention was
made in the Letellier principles
(see para 92, above). It further
reiterates that in Lavents (cited
above), where the court was called
upon to examine the relevance and
sufficiency of reasons for
depriving the applicant of liberty
pending trial for a considerable
period of time, the respondent
government had unsuccessfully
argued that different criteria
ought to apply to the assessment of
the reasons for the impugned
restriction on liberty as the
applicant had been detained not
only in prison but also been held
in house arrest and in hospital.
The court dismissed the argument,
77
stating that art 5 did not regulate
the conditions of detention,
referring to the approach
previously adopted in Mancini
(cited above) and other cases cited
therein. The court went on to
specify that the notions of
‘degree’ and ‘intensity’ in the
case law, as criteria for the
applicability of art 5, referred
only to the degree of restrictions
to the liberty of movement, not to
the differences in comfort or in
the internal regime in different
places of detention. Thus, the
court proceeded to apply the same
criteria for the entire period of
deprivation of liberty,
irrespective of the place where the
applicant was detained.”
HOUSE ARREST IN INDIA
43. In India, the concept of house arrest has
its roots in laws providing for preventive
detention. Section 5 of the National Security
Act, 1980, is a law providing for preventive
detention. Section 5 reads as follows:-
“5. Power to regulate place and
conditions of detention.—Every
person in respect of whom a
78
detention order has been made shall
be liable—
(a) to be detained in such place
and under such conditions,
including conditions as to
maintenance, discipline and
punishment for breaches of
discipline, as the appropriate
Government may, by general or
special order, specify; and
(b) to be removed from one place of
detention to another place of
detention, whether within the same
State or in another State, by order
of the appropriate Government:
Provided that no order shall be
made by a State Government under
clause (b) for the removal of a
person from one State to another
State except with the consent of
the Government of that other
State.”
Article 22(3) reads as follows: -
“22(3).Nothing in clauses (1) and
(2) shall apply
(a) to any person who for the time
being is an enemy alien; or
(b) to any person who is arrested
or detained under any law providing
for preventive detention.”
79
Thus, the safeguards under Article 22(1) and
Article 22(2) are not available under a law
providing for preventive detention.
44. We notice that State of Rajasthan and Ors.
vs. Shamsher Singh6 was a case under the said
act. It was a case where the High Court had
after quashing the order of detention on
certain grounds gave certain directions. The
detenu was to be released from the central jail
but thereafter it was directed that the detenu
be placed under house arrest or in place like
Dak Bungalow or Circuit House with members of
his family consisting of his wife and children.
The authorities were to permit interview with
other relatives also if the detenu was kept
outside the house. This Court allowed the
appeal of the state finding that the
requirements of law in relation to detention
6 AIR (1985) SC 1082
80
had been complied with and the detention was
wrongly quashed. In A.K. Roy and Ors. vs.
Union of India (UOI) and Ors.
7 a Constitution
Bench also dealt with the issue relating to
preventive detention and house arrest in the
said context. We may notice only paragraph 74.
“74. By Section 5, every person in
respect of whom a detention order
has been made is liablea. to be detained in such place
and under such conditions,
including conditions as to
maintainance, discipline and
punishment for breaches of
discipline, as the appropriate
Government may, by general or
special order, specify: and
b. to be removed from one place
of detention to another place of
detention, whether in the same
State or another State, by order of
the appropriate Government.
The objection of the petitioners to
these provisions on the ground of
their unreasonableness is not
wholly without substance. Laws of
preventive detention cannot, by the
back-door, introduce procedural
measures of a punitive kind.
7 AIR (1982) SC 710
81
Detention without trial is an evil
to be suffered, but to no greater
extent and in no greater measure
than is minimally necessary in the
interest of the country and the
community. It is neither fair nor
just that a detenu should have to
suffer detention in “such place” as
the Government may specify.
The normal rule has to be that the
detenu will be kept in detention in
a place which is within the
environs of his or her ordinary
place of residence. If a person
ordinarily resides in Delhi, to
keep him in detention in a far off
place like Madras or Calcutta is a
punitive measure by itself which,
in matters of preventive detention
at any rate, is not to be
encouraged. Besides, keeping a
person in detention in a place
other than the one where he
habitually resides makes it
impossible for his friends and
relatives to meet him or for the
detenu to claim the advantage of
facilities like having his own
food. The requirements of
administrative convenience, safety
and security may justify in a given
case the transfer of a detenu to a
place other than that where he
ordinarily resides, but that can
only be by way of an exception and
not as a matter of general rule.
Even when a detenu is required to
be kept in or transferred to a
82
place which is other than his usual
place of residence, he ought not to
be sent to any far-off place which,
by the very reason of its distance,
is likely to deprive him of the
facilities to which he is entitled.
Whatever smacks of punishment must
be scrupulous avoided in matters of
preventive detention.”
45. Thus ‘house arrests’ have been resorted to
in India, in the context of law relating to
‘preventive detention’. What is however
relevant is that preventive detention is also a
form of forced detention. House arrest is also
custody and forced detention.
46. As to whether such detention would qualify
as custody under Section 167 will be considered
when we discuss the provision relating to set
off under Section 428 of Cr.P.C.
A LOOK AT PRISONS IN INDIA
47. The executive summary published by the
National Crime Records Bureau for 2019 is as
follows: -
83
“Prison Statistics India – 2019
Executive Summary
Prisons – Types & Occupancy
Year No. of prisons Actual Capacity
of Priosns
No. of
Prisoners at
the end of
the year
Occupancy rate
at the end of
the year
2017 1,361 3,91,574 4,50,696 115.1%
2018 1,339 3,96,223 4,66,084 117.6%
2019 1,350 4,03,739 4,78,600 118.5%
1. The total number of prisons at
national level has increased from
1,339 in 2018 to 1,350 in 2019,
having increased by 0.82%.
2. The 1,350 prisons in the country
consist of 617 Sub Jails, 410
District Jails, 144 Central Jails,
86 Open Jails, 41 Special Jails, 31
Women Jails, 19 Borstal School and
2 Other than the above Jails.
3. The highest number of jails was
reported in Rajasthan (144)
followed by Tamil Nadu (141),
Madhya Pradesh (131), Andhra
Pradesh (106), Karnataka (104) and
Odisha (91). These Six (6) States
together cover 53.11 % of total
jails in the country as on 31st
December, 2019.
4. Delhi has reported the highest
number of Central jails (14) in the
country. States/UTs like Arunachal
Pradesh, Meghalaya, A & N Island, D
& N Haveli, Daman & Diu and
84
Lakshadweep have no central Jail as
on 31st December, 2019.
5. Uttar Pradesh has reported the
highest number of District jails
(62). States/UTs like Goa,
Chandigarh, D & N Haveli, Daman &
Diu, Delhi, Lakshadweep and
Puducherry have no District Jail as
on 31st December, 2019.
6. Tamil Nadu has reported highest
number of Sub-jails (96).
States/UTs like Arunachal Pradesh,
Goa, Haryana, Meghalaya, Mizoram,
Nagaland, Sikkim, Chandigarh and
Delhi have no sub-jail in their
States/UTs, as on 31st December,
2019.
7. Only 15 States/UTs were having
Women Jails (31 Women Jails) with a
total capacity of 6,511 in India.
These States/UTs (number of Jails,
Inmates Capacity) are – Rajasthan
(7) (1048), Tamil Nadu (5) (2018),
Kerala (3) (232), Andhra Pradesh
(2) (280), Bihar (2) (152), Gujarat
(2) (410), Delhi (2) (648),
Karnataka(1) (100), Maharashtra(1)
(262), Mizoram (1) (90), Odisha(1)
(55), Punjab(1) (320), Telangana(1)
(250), Uttar Pradesh(1) (420) and
West Bengal(1) (226) and The rest
of 21 States/ UTs have no separate
Women Jail as on 31st December,
2019.
8. The actual capacity of prisons
has increased from 3,96,223 in 2018
85
to 4,03,739 in 2019 (as on 31st
December of each year), having
increased by 1.90%. Number of
prisoners lodged in various jails
has increased from 4,66,084 in 2018
to 4,78,600 in 2019 (as on 31st
December of each year), having
increased by 2.69% during the
period.
9. Out of the total capacity
4,03,739 in 1,350 prisons in 2019,
the Central Jails of the country
were having the highest capacity of
inmates (1,77,618) followed by the
District Jails (capacity of
1,58,986 inmates) and the Sub Jails
(capacity of 45,071 inmates). Among
the other types of jails, Special
Jails, Open Jails and Women Jails
were having a capacity of 7,262,
6,113 and 6,511 inmates
respectively as on 31st December,
2019. The highest number of inmates
were lodged in Central Jails
(2,20,021) followed by District
Jails (2,06,217) and Sub Jails
(38,030) as on 31st December, 2019.
The number of inmates in Women
Jails were 3,652.
10.Uttar Pradesh has reported the
highest capacity in their jails
(capacity of 60,340 inmates in 72
jails contributing 14.95% of total
capacity) followed by Bihar
(capacity of 42,222 inmates in 59
Jails contributing 10.46% of total
capacity) and Madhya Pradesh
86
(capacity of 28,718 inmates in 131
jails contributing 7.1% of total
capacity).
11.Out of the 4,78,600 prisoners,
4,58,687 were male prisoners and
19,913 were female prisoners.
12.The occupancy rate has increased
from 117.6% in 2018 to 118.5% in
2019 (as on 31st December of each
year).
13.The highest occupancy rate was
in District Jails (129.7%) followed
by Central Jails (123.9%) and Sub
Jails (84.4%). The occupancy rate
in Women Jails was 56.1% as on 31st
December, 2019.
14.Uttar Pradesh has reported the
highest number of prisoners
(1,01,297) in its jails
contributing 21.2% followed by
Madhya Pradesh (44,603), Bihar
(39,814), Maharashtra (36,798),
Punjab (24,174) and West Bengal
(23,092) as on 31st December, 2019.
These States together are
contributing around 56.4% of total
prisoners in the country.
15.Delhi has reported the highest
occupancy rate (174.9%) followed by
Uttar Pradesh (167.9%) and
Uttarakhand (159.0%) as on 31st
December, 2019.
16.The capacity in 31 Women Jails
was 6,511 with the actual number of
women prisoners in these Women
87
Jails was 3,652 (Occupancy Rate:
56.1%). The capacity of Women
Inmates in other types of Jail
(i.e. except Women Jails) was
21,192 with the actual number of
women inmates in these jails was
16,261 (Occupancy Rate: 76.7%) as
on 31st December, 2019.
17.Uttarakhand has reported the
highest female occupancy rate
(170.1%) followed by Chhattisgarh
(136.1%) and Uttar Pradesh
(127.3%). However, the highest
number of female inmates were
confined in the Jails of Uttar
Pradesh (4,174) followed by Madhya
Pradesh (1,758) and Maharashtra
(1,569).
Prisoners – Types & Demography
Year No. of convicts No. of undertrial
prisoners
No. of
Detenues
No. of other
inmates
Total no. of
prisoners
2017 1,39,149 3,08,718 2,136 693 4,50,696
2018 1,39,488 3,23,537 2,384 675 4,66,084
2019 1,44,125 3,30,487 3,223 765 4,78,600
1. During the year 2019, a total of
18,86,092 inmates were admitted in
various jails of the country.
2. A total of (4,78,600) prisoners
as on 31st December, 2019 were
confined in various jails across
the country. The number of
Convicts, Undertrial inmates and
Detenues were reported as 1,44,125,
3,30,487 and 3,223 respectively
88
accounting for 30.11%, 69.05% and
0.67% respectively at the end of
2019. Other prisoners accounted for
0.2% (765 prisoners) of total
prisoners.
3. Convicted Prisoners
a. The number of convicted
prisoners has increased from
1,39,488 in 2018 to 1,44,125 in
2019 (as on 31st December of each
year), having increased by 3.32%
during the period.
b. Out of total 1,44,125 convicts,
the highest number of convicted
prisoners were lodged in Central
Jails (66.2%, 95,470 convicts)
followed by District Jails (27.0%,
38,846 convicts) and Open Jails
(3.0%, 4,288 convicts) as on 31st
December,2019.
c. Uttar Pradesh has reported the
maximum number of convicts (19.2%,
27,612 convicts) in the country
followed by Madhya Pradesh (14.1%,
20,253 convicts) and Maharashtra
(6.3%, 9,096 convicts) at the end
of 2019.
d. Among the 1,44,125 convicts, 325
were civil convicts.
4. Undertrial Prisoners
a. The number of undertrial
prisoners has increased from
3,23,537 in 2018 to 3,30,487 in
2019 (as on 31st December of each
89
year), having increased by 2.15%
during this period.
b. Among the 3,30,487 undertrial
prisoners, the highest number of
undertrial prisoners was lodged in
District Jails(50.5%, 1,66,917
undertrials) followed by Central
Jails(36.7%, 1,21,342 undertrials)
and Sub Jails(10.6%, 35,059
undertrials) as on 31st December,
2019.
c. Uttar Pradesh has reported the
maximum number of undertrials
(22.2%, 73,418 undertrials) in the
country followed by Bihar (9.5%,
31,275 undertrials) and Maharashtra
(8.3%, 27,557 undertrials) at the
end of 2019.
d. Among the 3,30,487 undertrial
prisoners, only 91 were civil
inmates.
5. Detenues
a. The number of detenues has
increased from 2,384 in 2018 to
3,223 in 2019 (as on 31st December
of each year), having increased by
35.19% during this period.
b. Among the 3,223 detenues, the
highest number of detenues were
lodged in Central Jails (81.4%,
2,622 detenues) followed by
District Jails (9.9%, 318
detenues) and Special Jails (6.1%,
196 detenues) as on 31st
December,2019.
90
c. Tamil Nadu has reported the
maximum number of detenues (38.5%,
1,240) in the country followed by
Gujarat (21.7%, 698) and Jammu &
Kashmir (12.5%, 404) at the end of
2019.
6. Women Prisoners with Children
a. There were 1,543 women prisoners
with 1,779 children as on 31st
December, 2019.
b. Among these women prisoners,
1,212 women prisoners were
undertrial prisoners who were
accompanied by 1,409 children and
325 convicted prisoners who were
accompanied by 363 children.
7. Age-group of the Prisoners
a. As on 31st December, 2019 the
maximum number of inmates (2,07,942
inmates, 43.4%) were belonging to
the age group 18- 30 years followed
by the age group 30- 50 years
(2,07,104 inmates, 43.3%).
b. 63,336 inmates (13.2%) were
belonging to the age group above 50
years.
c. 218 inmates belonged to the age
group of 16-18 years.
8. Education
a. Among the 4,78,600 prisoners,
literacy profile of 1,98,872
(41.6%) prisoners was Below Class
X, 1,03,036 (21.5%) prisoners were
91
Class X & above but below
Graduation, 30,201 (6.3%) prisoners
were having a Degree, 8,085 (1.7%)
prisoners were Post Graduates and
5,677 (1.2%) prisoners were
Technical Diploma/Degree holders.
b. A total of 1,32,729 (27.7%)
prisoners were Illiterate.
9. Domicile of Origin of Prisoners
a. Among the 4,78,600 prisoners as
on 31st December, 2019, around
90.8% (4,34,564 inmates) of
prisoners belonged to the State
followed by prisoners belonging to
the Other States (8.0%, 38,428
inmates) and prisoners belonging to
the Other Country (1.2%, 5,608
inmates).
b. Among the 1,44,125 convicts,
92.4% convicts (1,33,228 inmates)
belonged to the State while 6.1%
(8,726 inmates) and 1.5% (2,171
inmates) belonged to the Other
States and Other Country
respectively.
c. Haryana has reported the most
number of other State domicile
convicts (15.5%, 1,353 convicts)
followed by Delhi (9.8%, 855
convicts) and Maharashtra (9.2%,
800 convicts) as on 31st December,
2019.
d. Among the 3,30,487 undertrial
prisoners, 90.2% (2,98,208 inmates)
belonged to the State while 8.9%
92
(29,300 inmates) and 0.9% (2,979
inmates) belonged to the Other
States and Other Country
respectively.
e. Maharashtra has reported the
highest number of undertrial
prisoners of other states (16.0%,
4,675 inmates) followed by Uttar
Pradesh (11.8%, 3,470 inmates) and
Delhi (11.8%, 3,453 inmates) at the
end of 2019.
Foreign Prisoners
Year No. of prisons at
the end of the year
No. of foreign
prisoners
Share of foreign
prisoners
2017 4,50,696 4,917 1.1%
2018 4,66,084 5,168 1.1%
2019 4,78,600 5,608 1.2%
1. The number of prisoners of
foreign nationality (as on 31st
December of each year) has
increased from 5,168 in 2018 to
5,608 in 2019, having increased by
8.51% during this period.
2. The percentage share of foreign
prisoners out of total prisoners
has increased from 1.1% in 2018 to
1.2% in 2019 (as on 31st December
of each year).
3. Among 5,608 prisoners of foreign
nationality at the end of 2019,
4,776 were Males and 832 were
females.
4. Among these foreign national
prisoners, 38.7% (2,171 inmates)
93
were Convicts, 53.1% (2,979
inmates) were Undertrials and 0.7%
(40 inmates) were Detenues.
5. Among the foreign convicts, the
highest number of foreign convicts
were from Bangladesh (67.7%, 1,470
convicts) followed by Nepal (10.5%,
228 convicts) and Myanmar (7.1%,155
convicts) at the end of 2019.
Prison – Budget & Infrastructure
1. The total budget for the
financial year 2019-20 for all
prisons in the country was ` 6818.1
Crore. The actual expenditure was `
5958.3 Crore which is 87.39% of
total annual budget for FY 2019-20.
2. A total of ` 2060.96 Crore was
spent on inmates during FY 2019-20
which is almost 34.59% of total
annual expenditure of all prisons
for FY 2019-20.
3. Almost 47.9% (` 986.18 Crore) of
total expenses on inmates were
spent on Food followed by 4.3% (`
89.48 Crore) on Medical matters,
1.0% (` 20.27 Crore) on welfare
activities, 1.1 %(` 22.56 Crore) on
Clothing and 1.2% (` 24.20 Crore)
on Vocational/ Educational
trainings.
4. Among all the States/UTs, out of
total expenditure, Haryana has
spent the highest share of
expenditure on inmates (100.0%, `
272.62 Crore) followed by Andhra
94
Pradesh (88.1%, ` 152.24 Crore) and
Delhi (66.2%, ` 310.02 Crore)
during the Financial Year 2019-20.
5. Among the 1,350 prisons, 269
prisons were renovated/expanded
during 2019.
6. Among the 1,350 prisons, 808
prisons were having Video
Conference facility as on 31st
December 2019.
7. A total of 33,537 quarters were
available against the actual staff
strength of 60,787 as on 31st
December, 2019.”
48. According to the data published by the
National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) the
conditions relating to jails and prisoners is
fairly alarming. There were a total number of
1350 prisons as of the year 2019. 1350 prisons
consists of 617 Sub Jails, 410 District Jails,
144 Central Jails, 86 Open Jails, 41 Special
Jails, 31 Women Jails, 19 Borstal School and 2
Other than the above jails.
49. A perusal of the executive summary would
reveal an alarming state of affairs as far as
95
occupancy rate is concerned. It has climbed to
118.5 percent in 2019 as on 31st December. The
occupancy rate is alarming for male prisoners.
In fact, during 2019, a total of 18,86,092
inmates were admitted in the jails. The figure
of 4,78,600 prisoners as on 31st December, 2019
is the figure obviously after considering the
number of prisoners who would have been inter
alia bailed out. The number of under trial
prisoners in 2019 was 3,30,487 which in fact
constituted 69.05 per cent of the total no. of
prisoners. Delhi had the highest occupancy rate
of 174.9 percent followed by Uttar Pradesh
which came second with 167.9 percent. This
means that in Delhi a prison which was meant to
be occupied by 100 persons, was used for
accommodating 174 persons. We cannot also be
oblivious to the fact that the figures
represent the official version.
96
50. There is a tremendous amount of
overcrowding in jails in India. Secondly, a
very large sum (Rs. 6818.1 crore) was the
budget on prisons. Both aspects are relevant
in the context of the possibilities that house
arrest offer.
51. In the context of the rights conferred on
citizens under Article 19 which are essentially
constitutional freedoms or rather the
enumerated rights as explained by this Court in
Maneka Gandhi vs. Union of India,
8 when a
citizen is placed on house arrest, which has
the effect of depriving him of any freedom, it
will not only be custody but it would involve
depriving citizens under custody of the
fundamental freedoms unless such freedoms are
specifically protected. A person has a
fundamental right to move in any part of the
country. It is obvious that in the case of a
8 AIR 1978 SC 597
97
person undergoing a house arrest and in the
teeth of an absolute prohibition, in the facts
of the case forbidding the appellant from
moving outside his home, the hallmark of
custody described in the case of incarceration
is equally present. Personal liberty perhaps
is the most important of all values recognized
as such under the constitution. It is to be
jealously guarded from any encroachment, save
where such intrusion has the clear sanction of
law. The expression “procedure established by
law” has received an expansive and liberal
exposition in decisions of this Court
commencing from Maneka Gandhi(supra). Right to
personal liberty is the birth right of every
human being. The right under Article 21 is
undoubtedly available to citizens and noncitizens. While personal liberty is a wide
expression capable of encompassing within its
98
fold, many elements apart from the right to be
protected against the deprivation of liberty in
the sense of the freedom from all kinds of
restraints imposed on a person, the irreducible
core of personal liberty, undoubtedly, consist
of the freedom against compelled living in
forced custody.
52. Here we bear in mind the concept of
negative liberty. In the celebrated lecture,
“Two Concepts of Liberty” by Isaiah Berlin, he
states as follows, inter alia:-
“The notion of ‘negative’ freedom
I am normally said to be free to
the degree to which no human being
interferes with my activity.
Political liberty in this sense is
simply the area within which a man
can do what he wants. If I am
prevented by other persons from
doing what I want I am to that
degree unfree; and if the area
within which I can do what I want
is contracted by other men beyond a
certain minimum, I can be described
as being coerced, or, it may be,
enslaved. Coercion of not,
99
however, a term that covers every
form of inability. If I say that I
am unable to jump more than 10 feet
in the air, or cannot read because
I am blind or cannot understand the
darker pages of Hegel, it would be
eccentric to say that I am to that
degree enslaved or coerced.
Coercion implies the deliberate
interference of other human beings
within the area in which I wish to
act. You lack political liberty or
freedom only if you are prevented
from attaining your goal by human
beings. Mere incapacity to attain
your goal is not lack of political
freedom. This is brought out by
the use of such modern expressions
as ‘economic freedom’ and its
counterpart, ‘economic slavery’.
It is argued, very plausibly, that
if a man is too poor to afford
something on which there is no
legal ban- a loaf of bread, a
journey round the world, recourse
to the law courts- he is as little
free to have it as he would be if
it were forbidden him by law. If
my poverty were a kind of disease,
which prevented me from buying
bread or paying for the journey
round the world, or getting my case
heard, as lameness prevents me from
running, this inability would not
naturally be described as a lack of
freedom at all, least of all
political freedom. It is only
because I believe that my inability
100
to get what I want is due to the
fact that other human beings have
made arrangements whereby I am,
whereas others are not, prevented
from having enough money with which
to pay for it, that I think myself
a victim of coercion or slavery.
In other words, this use of the
term depends on a particular social
and economic theory about the
causes of my poverty or weakness.
If my lack of means is due to my
lack of mental or physical
capacity, then I begin to speak of
being deprived of freedom (and not
simply of poverty) only if I accept
the theory. If, in addition, I
believe that I am being kept in
want by a definite arrangement
which I consider unjust or unfair,
I speak of economic slavery or
oppression. ‘The nature of things
does not madden us, only ill will
does’, said Rousseau. The
criterion of oppression is the part
that I believe to be played by
other human beings, directly or
indirectly, in frustrating my
wishes. By being free in this
sense I mean not being interfered
with by others. The wider the area
of non-interference the wider my
freedom.”
53. In fact, personal liberty is interlinked
with the right to life itself. It is an
101
inseparable part without which the right to
life itself is deprived of its content and
meaning. The right to life and personal
liberty is essentially also based on the
principle that men in regard to fundamental
rights be treated equal and that no man or a
group of men, even organized as a state under
which he lives can deprive him except without
infringing the right to be treated equally
unless there is a legitimate sanction of law.
Personal liberty of its members must continue
to remain the most cherished goal of any
civilized state and its interference with the
same must be confined to those cases where it
is sanctioned by the law and genuinely needed.
The court would lean in favour of upholding
this precious, inalienable and immutable value.
54. We have noticed that in the United States
ordinarily, house arrest follows a conviction
102
and is a choice which is available to the
Courts to send a person to house arrest which
is in lieu of a jail sentence.
55. We will use this opportunity to echo the
argument of Sh. Kapil Sibal, learned senior
counsel for the appellant that no Court even if
it is the High Court has any inherent power to
deprive any person of his personal liberty by
placing him under house arrest. Placing a
person in custody depriving him of his rights
which would include his fundamental rights as
he would stand deprived of on giving effect to
the term of house arrest, would amount to a
completely illegal exercise, were it not for
the fact that the High Court must be treated as
having exercised powers available to a Judge
under Section 167 of the Cr.P.C. Thus, runs the
argument.
103
THE REMEDIES OPEN TO AN ACCUSED IN THE
CASE OF REMAND UNDER SECTION 167 OF THE
CR.P.C.
56. In State rep. by Inspector of Police and
others vs. N.M.T. Joy Immaculate9, a bench of 3
learned judges considered the question of
maintainability of a revision under Section 397
of the Cr.P.C. against an order of remand. We
notice para 13 which reads as follows:
“(13) Section 167 Cr.PC. empowers a
Judicial Magistrate to authorise
the detention of an accused in the
custody of police. Section 209
Cr.P.C. confers power upon a
Magistrate to remand an accused to
custody until the case has been
committed to the Court of Session
and also until the conclusion of
the trial. Section 309 Cr.PC.
confers power upon a court to
remand an accused to custody after
taking cognisance of an offence or
during commencement of trial when
it finds it necessary to adjourn
the enquiry or trial. The order of
remand has no bearing on the
proceedings of the trial itself nor
can it have any effect on the
ultimate decision of the case. If
9 (2004) 5 SCC 729
104
an order of remand is found to be
illegal, it cannot result in
acquittal of the accused or in
termination of proceedings. A
remand order cannot affect the
progress of the trial or its
decision in any manner. Therefore,
applying the test laid down in
Madhu Limaye case [(1977) 4 SCC 551
: 1978 SCC (Cri) 10 : AIR 1978 SC
47] it cannot be categorised even
as an “intermediate order”. The
order is, therefore, a pure and
simple interlocutory order and in
view of the bar created by subsection (2) of Section 397 Cr.P.C,
a revision against the said order
is not maintainable. The High
Court, therefore, erred in
entertaining the revision against
the order dated 6-11-2001 of the
Metropolitan Magistrate granting
police custody of the accused Joy
Immaculate for one day.”
57. Thus, an order under Section 167 is purely
an interlocutory order. No revision is
maintainable. A petition under Section 482
cannot be ruled out. Now at this juncture we
must notice the following dimension. When a
person arrested in a non-bailable offence is in
105
custody, subject to the restrictions, contained
therein, a court other than High Court or Court
of Session, before whom he is brought inter
alia, can release him on bail under Section 437
of the Cr.P.C. Section 439 of the Cr.P.C. deals
with special powers of High Court and court of
session to grant bail to a person in custody.
The said courts may also set aside or modify
any condition in an order by a Magistrate.
58. In Central Bureau of Investigation, Special
Investigation Cell v. Anupam J. Kulkarni10 , we
may notice the following statement: -
“Now coming to the object and scope
of Section 167 it is well-settled
that it is supplementary to Section
57. It is clear from Section 57
that the investigation should be
completed in the first instance
within 24 hours; if not the
arrested person should be brought
by the police before a Magistrate
as provided under Section 167. The
law does not authorise a police
officer to detain an arrested
person for more than 24 hours
exclusive of the time necessary for
10 (1992) 3 SCC 141
106
the journey from the place of
arrest to the Magistrate court.
Sub-section (1) of Section 167
covers all this procedure and also
lays down that the police officer
while forwarding the accused to the
nearest Magistrate should also
transmit a copy of the entries in
the diary relating to the case. The
entries in the diary are meant to
afford to the Magistrate the
necessary information upon which he
can take the decision whether the
accused should be detained in the
custody further or not. It may be
noted even at this stage the
Magistrate can release him on bail
if an application is made and if he
is satisfied that there are no
grounds to remand him to custody
but if he is satisfied that further
remand is necessary then he should
act as provided under Section 167.”
59. Thus, ordinarily, when the court considers
a request for remand there would be an
application for bail. It is for the court to
grant bail failing which an order of remand
would follow.
60. No doubt, while the remand report is
considered by the Magistrate the application
107
for bail may be moved under Section 439 instead
of moving under Section 437 in view of the
restrictions contained therein. Though an
application under Section 397 would not lie
against the remand, as already noticed, an
application for bail would lie under Section
439. Therefore, ordinarily the accused would
seek bail and legality and the need for remand
would also be considered by the High Court or
court of session in an application under
Section 439. No doubt the additional
restrictions under section 43 (D) (5) of UAPA
are applicable to citizens of India in cases
under the said law.
WHETHER A WRIT OF HABEAS CORPUS LIES
AGAINST AN ORDER OF REMAND UNDER SECTION
(167) OF CR.P.C.
61. A Habeas Corpus petition is one seeking
redress in the case of illegal detention. It is
intended to be a most expeditious remedy as
108
liberty is at stake. Whether a Habeas Corpus
petition lies when a person is remanded to
judicial custody or police custody is not res
integra. We may notice only two judgments of
this court. In Manubhai Ratilal Patel v. State
of Gujarat and others,11. We may notice
paragraph 24.
“(24) The act of directing remand
of an accused is fundamentally a
judicial function. The Magistrate
does not act in executive capacity
while ordering the detention of an
accused. While exercising this
judicial act, it is obligatory on
the part of the Magistrate to
satisfy himself whether the
materials placed before him justify
such a remand or, to put it
differently, whether there exist
reasonable grounds to commit the
accused to custody and extend his
remand. The purpose of remand as
postulated under Section 167 is
that investigation cannot be
completed within 24 hours. It
enables the Magistrate to see that
the remand is really necessary.
This requires the investigating
agency to send the case diary along
11 (2013) 1 SCC 314
109
with the remand report so that the
Magistrate can appreciate the
factual scenario and apply his mind
whether there is a warrant for
police remand or justification for
judicial remand or there is no need
for any remand at all. It is
obligatory on the part of the
Magistrate to apply his mind and
not to pass an order of remand
automatically or in a mechanical
manner.”
However, the Court also held as follows:
“31. It is well-accepted principle
that a writ of habeas corpus is not
to be entertained when a person is
committed to judicial custody or
police custody by the competent
court by an order which prima facie
does not appear to be without
jurisdiction or passed in an
absolutely mechanical manner or
wholly illegal. As has been stated
in B. Ramachandra Rao [(1972) 3 SCC
256 : 1972 SCC (Cri) 481 : AIR 1971
SC 2197] and Kanu Sanyal [(1974) 4
SCC 141 : 1974 SCC (Cri) 280] , the
court is required to scrutinise the
legality or otherwise of the order
of detention which has been passed.
Unless the court is satisfied that
a person has been committed to jail
custody by virtue of an order that
suffers from the vice of lack of
jurisdiction or absolute
110
illegality, a writ of habeas corpus
cannot be granted.”
62. One of us (U.U. Lalit, J.) speaking for a
Bench of two, followed the aforesaid line of
thought in the decision of Serious Fraud
Investigation Office and Ors. vs. Rahul Modi
and Ors.12 and held as follows:
“(21) The act of directing remand
of an accused is thus held to be a
judicial function and the challenge
to the order of remand is not to be
entertained in a habeas corpus
petition.”
We may also notice paragraph 19 from the same
judgment.
“(19) The law is thus clear that “in
habeas corpus proceedings a court is to
have regard to the legality or
otherwise of the detention at the time
of the return and not with reference to
the institution of the proceedings”.
63. Thus, we would hold as follows:
12 (2019) 5 SCC 266
111
If the remand is absolutely illegal or the
remand is afflicted with the vice of lack
of jurisdiction, a Habeas Corpus petition
would indeed lie. Equally, if an order of
remand is passed in an absolutely
mechanical manner, the person affected can
seek the remedy of Habeas Corpus. Barring
such situations, a Habeas Corpus petition
will not lie.
WHETHER SUPERIOR COURTS (INCLUDING A HIGH
COURT) CAN EXERCISE POWER UNDER SECTION
(167) OF CR.P.C.? CAN BROKEN PERIODS OF
CUSTODY COUNT FOR THE PURPOSE OF DEFAULT
BAIL?
64. One of the contentions raised is that the
order passed by the High Court of Delhi, is not
one passed under Section 167 of the Cr.P.C.,
for the reason that what the Cr.P.C.
contemplates is an order passed by a
Magistrate. It, therefore, becomes necessary
to consider whether a Court other than a
112
Magistrate can order remand under Section 167.
In the first place, going by the words used in
Section 167, what is contemplated is that
Magistrate orders remand under Section 167(2).
65. Let us, however, delve a little more into
the issue. Let us take a case where a
Magistrate orders a remand under Section 167
and at the same time, he also rejects the
application for bail preferred by the accused.
The accused approaches the High Court under
Section 439 of the Cr.P.C. The court reverses
the order and grants him bail. The accused who
was sent to custody means police custody or
judicial custody is brought out of his custody
and is released on bail pursuing to the order
of the High Court. This order is challenged
before the Apex Court. The Apex Court reverses
the order granting bail. The original order
passed by the Magistrate is revived. It is
113
apparent that the accused goes back to custody.
Since assuming that the period of 15 days is
over and police custody is not permissible, he
is sent back to judicial custody. Equally if he
was already in judicial custody, the order
granting judicial custody is revived. Let us
assume in the illustration that the accused was
in custody only for a period of 10 days and
after the order passed by this Court and the
accused who spent another 80 days, he
completes, in other words, a total period of
custody of 90 days adding the period of
custody, he suffered consequent upon the remand
by the Magistrate. That is by piecing up these
broken periods of custody, the statutory period
of 90 days entitling the accused to default
bail, is reached. Can it be said that the
order of this Court granting custody should not
be taken into consideration for calculating the
114
period of 90 days, upon completion of which the
accused can set up a case for default bail. We
would think that the mere fact is that it is
the Apex Court which exercised the power to
remand, which was wrongly appreciated by the
High Court in the illustration, would not
detract from the custody being authorized under
Section 167.
66. Let us take another example. After
ordering remand, initially for a period of 15
days of which 10 days is by way of police
custody and 5 days by way of judicial custody,
the Magistrate enlarges an accused on bail. The
High Court interferes with the order granting
bail on the basis that the bail ought not to
have been granted. Resultantly, the person who
on the basis of the order of bail, has come out
of jail custody, is put back into the judicial
custody or jail custody. The order is one
115
passed by the High Court. The order granting
custody by the High Court cannot be treated as
one which is not anchored in Section 167 of the
Cr.P.C. Therefore, we would think that though
the power is vested with the Magistrate to
order remand by way, of appropriate
jurisdiction exercised by the superior Courts,
(it would, in fact, include the Court of
Sessions acting under Section 439) the power
under Section 167 could also be exercised by
Courts which are superior to the Magistrate.
67. Therefore, while ordinarily, the Magistrate
is the original Court which would exercise
power to remand under Section 167, the exercise
of power by the superior Courts which would
result in custody being ordered ordinarily
(police or judicial custody) by the superior
Courts which includes the High Court, would
indeed be the custody for the purpose of
116
calculating the period within which the charge
sheet must be filed, failing with the accused
acquires the statutory right to default bail.
We have also noticed the observations of this
Court in AIR 1962 SC 1506 (supra). In such
circumstances broken periods of custody can be
counted whether custody is suffered by the
order of the Magistrate or superior courts, if
investigation remains incomplete after the
custody, whether continuous or broken periods
pieced together reaches the requisite period;
default bail becomes the right of the detained
person.
68. Equally when an order in bail application
is put in issue, orders passed resulting in
detaining the accused would if passed by a
superior court be under Section 167.
THE EFFECT OF TRANSIT ORDER? IS IT A
PRODUCTION ORDER THOUGH SOURCED UNDER
SECTION 167 CR.P.C.?
117
69. The Respondent contends that the transit
remand order is not a remand for detention
under Section 167 of the Cr.P.C. but only one
for production. Reliance is placed on Section
57. It is in other words, pointed out that
Section 57 contemplates that in the absence of
‘special order’ under Section 167, a person
arrested without warrant must be produced
withing 24 hours excluding the time taken for
journey from the place of arrest to the place
where the Magistrate is located. Therefore, if
a ‘special order’ under Section 167 is
obtained, it is for the purpose of extending
the time in Section 57 for production of the
arrestee.
70. Per contra, Appellant contends that Section
167 specially covers cases where a judicial
Magistrate who has no jurisdiction to try a
118
case, can order a remand. There is no other
provision for ordering transit remand.
71. In this case the transit remand was ordered
on 28.08.2018. The Appellant was to be produced
under the same on 30.08.2018 before the
Magistrate in Pune. A person may be arrested by
a police officer in any part of India (Section
48 of Cr.P.C.). Under Section 56 the person
arrested without warrant is to be sent before
the Magistrate having jurisdiction or before
the officer in charge of a police station. It
is thereafter, that Section 57 forbids the
person so arrested:
i. from being detained for a period more
than what is reasonable.
ii. from being detained beyond 24 hours
from the time of arrest, excluding the
time necessary for the journey from the
place of arrest to the Magistrate
Court.
119
72. Now, the ‘Magistrate Court’ referred to in
Section 57 is the Magistrate competent to try
the case. Section 57 contains the peremptory
limit of 24 hours exclusive of the period for
journey, in the absence of ‘special order’
under Section 167.
73. The words ‘special order’ is not found in
Section 167 of the Cr.P.C. Therefore, could it
not be said that but for Section 57 permitting
the Magistrate to allowing time by passing an
order under Section 167, detention in violation
of Section 57 would be rendered illegal? What
is the nature of the custody on the basis of
the special order under Section 167 referred to
in Section 57? Is it police custody or is it
judicial custody? Is it any other custody? Will
the period of remand for statutory bail begin
from the date of this ‘special order’? Will it
120
begin only when the competent Magistrate orders
remand?
74. Now as far as this case is concerned, we
notice findings of the High Court of Delhi as
follows: (para 11 and para 15)
“(11) Mr. Navare next tried to draw
a distinction between the scope of
the function of a Magistrate before
whom an application for transit
remand is moved and the
jurisdictional Magistrate who
should be approached for an order
of remand in terms of Section 56 of
the Cr.P.C. According to Mr.
Navare, at the stage of transit
remand the concerned Magistrate
would not be required to satisfy
himself anything more than whether
an offence is made out and whether
the Police Officer seeking the
remand is in fact the one
authorized to do so.”
“(15) Therefore, when a person who
after arrest is required to be
produced before a jurisdiction
Judicial Magistrate is detained in
a place which is away from that
jurisdiction, and therefore cannot
be produced before the
jurisdictional Magistrate within 24
hours, as mandated both by Article
22(2) of the Constitution and by
121
Section 57 Cr.P.C., he will be
produced before the ‘nearest
Judicial Magistrate’ together with
‘a copy of the entries in the
diary’. Therefore, even before a
Magistrate before whom a transit
remand application is filed, the
mandatory requirement of Section
167 (1) Cr.P.C. is that a copy of
the entries in the case diary
should also be produced. It is on
that basis that under Section 167
(2) such ‘nearest Judicial
Magistrate’ will pass an order
authorising the detention of the
person arrested for a term not
exceeding 15 days in the whole.
Where he has no jurisdiction to try
the case and he finds further
detention unnecessary, he may order
the accused to be forwarded to the
jurisdictional Magistrate.”
75. In fact, as already noticed the submission
of the State of Maharashtra was also that once
a person was in judicial custody a writ of
habeas corpus would not lie which also was
rejected.
76. Now, the question may persist as to whether
the remand pursuant to a transit remand is to
police custody or judicial custody. It cannot
122
be judicial custody as the police is
exclusively entrusted with the man no doubt to
produce him before the Magistrate having
jurisdiction. It is therefore, police custody.
Could the police be engaged in questioning/
investigating the case by interrogating the
accused on the basis of the transit order
either before, embarking on the journey or
during the course of the journey and after the
journey before producing him? If it is thought
that during the journey it is impermissible,
then such interrogation would equally be
impermissible during the time of journey
permitted without obtaining an order under
Section 167. If also during such journey the
accused volunteers with a statement otherwise
falling under Section 27 of Evidence Act, it
would be one when the accused is in the custody
of the police. If it is police custody then,
123
the order of the Magistrate granting transit
remand would set the clock ticking in terms of
(1986) 3 SCC 141 to complete the period for the
purpose of default bail.
77. We may also notice that the interplay of
Section 57 and 167 was considered in the
judgment of this Court in Chaganti
Satyanarayana (supra). It was held as follows:
“(12) On a reading of the subsections (1) and (2) it may be seen
that sub-section (1) is a mandatory
provision governing what a police
officer should do when a person is
arrested and detained in custody
and it appears that the
investigation cannot be completed
withing the period of 24 hours
fixed by Section 57. Sub-section
(2) on the other hand pertains to
the powers of remand available to a
Magistrate and the manner in which
such powers should be exercised.
The terms of sub-section (1) of
Section 167 have to be read in
conjunction with Section 57.
Section 57 interdicts a police
officer from keeping in custody a
person without warrant for a longer
period than 24 hours without
124
production before a Magistrate,
subject to the exception that the
time taken for performing the
journey from the place of arrest to
the magistrate’s court can be
excluded from the prescribed period
of 24 hours. Since sub-section (1)
provides that if the investigation
cannot be completed within the
period of 24 hours fixed by Section
57 the accused has to be forwarded
to the magistrate along with the
entries in the diary, it follows
that a police officer is entitled
to keep an arrested person in
custody for a maximum period of 24
hours for purposes of
investigation. The resultant
position is that the initial period
of custody of an arrested person
till he is produced before a
Magistrate is neither referable to
nor in pursuance of an order of
remand passed by a magistrate. In
fact the powers of remand given to
a magistrate become exercisable
only after an accused is produced
before him in terms of sub-section
(1) of Section 167.”
“(13) Keeping proviso (a) out of
mind for some time let us look at
the wording of sub-section (2) of
Section 167. This sub-section
empowers the magistrate before whom
an accused is produced for purpose
of remand, whether he has
jurisdiction or not to try the
case, to order the detention of the
125
accused, either in police custody
or in judicial custody, for a term
not exceeding 15 days in the
whole.”
78. We would hold that the remand order be it a
transit remand order is one which is passed
under Section 167 of the Cr.P.C. and though it
may be for the production of the Appellant, it
involved authorising continued detention within
the meaning of Section 167.
THE IMPACT OF SECTION 428 OF CR.P.C.
79. Section 428 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure reads as follows:-
“(428) Period of detention
undergone by the accused to be setoff against the sentence of
imprisonment.—Where an accused
person has, on conviction, been
sentenced to imprisonment for a
term [, not being imprisonment in
default of payment of fine,] the
period of detention, if any,
undergone by him during the
investigation, inquiry or trial of
the same case and before the date
of such conviction, shall be set
126
off against the term of
imprisonment imposed on him on such
conviction, and the liability of
such person to undergo imprisonment
on such conviction shall be
restricted to the remainder, if
any, of the term of imprisonment
imposed on him:
[Provided that in cases referred to
in Section 433-A, such period of
detention shall be set off against
the period of fourteen years
referred to in that section.]”
80. If house arrest as ordered in this case is
to be treated as custody within the meaning of
section 167 of the Cr.P.C. would it not entail
the period of house arrest being treated as
part of the detention within the meaning of
Section 428 in case there is a conviction
followed by a sentence?
81. Do the provisions of Section 428 throw
light on the issues which we are called upon to
decide?
82. Section 428 enables a person convicted to
have the period of detention which he has
127
undergone during the investigation, enquiry or
trial set off against the term of imprisonment.
83. In this context, we may notice the judgment
of this court reported in Govt. of Andhra
Pradesh and another etc. v. Anne Venkateswara
Rao etc. etc.13 . In the said case the
Appellant in one of the appeals had been
detained under the Preventive Detention Act on
18.12.1969. He was produced before the
Magistrate sometime in April, 1970 in
connection with certain offences after he had
been released from preventive detention. He was
later convicted. This Court while dealing with
the contention that the benefit of provisions
of Section 428 must ennure to the Appellant
held:-
“The argument is that the
expression period of detention in
Section 428 includes detention
under the Preventive Detention Act
13AIR 1977 SC 1096
128
or the Maintenance of Internal
Security Act. It is true that the
section speaks of the ‘period of
detention’ undergone by an accused
person, but it expressly says that
the detention mentioned refers to
the detention during the
investigation, enquiry or trial of
the case in which the accused
person has been convicted. The
section makes it clear that the
period of detention which it allows
to be set off against the term of
imprisonment imposed on the accused
on conviction must be during the
investigation, enquiry or trial in
connection with the ‘same case’ in
which he has been convicted. We
therefore agree with the High Court
that the period during which the
writ petitioners were in preventive
detention cannot be set off under
Section 428 against the term of
imprisonment imposed on them.”
84. We may also notice that in Ajmer Singh and
others v. Union of India and others14 dealing
with the question as to whether the benefit of
Section 428 of the Cr.PC. was available to a
person convicted and sentenced by court martial
14AIR 1987 SC 1646
129
under the Army Act inter alia, this court took
the view that the benefit is not available.
The Court held: -
“(12) The section provides for setoff of the period of detention
undergone by an accused person
during the ‘investigation, inquiry
or trial’ of the same case before
the date of conviction. The
expression ‘investigation’ has been
defined in Section 2 (h) of the
Code as follows:-
‘2(h) ‘investigation’ includes all
the proceedings under this Code for
the collection of evidence
conducted by a police officer or by
any person (other than a
Magistrate) who is authorised by a
Magistrate in this behalf’. In the
case of persons tried by CourtsMartial there is no investigation
conducted by any police officer
under the Code or by any person
authorised by Magistrate in that
behalf.”
85. There is a scheme which is unravelled by
the Code regarding detention of an accused. The
starting point appears to be the arrest and
detention of the person in connection with the
130
cognizable offence by a police officer without
a warrant. He can detain him and question him
in the course of the investigation. However,
the officer cannot detain the accused beyond 24
hours excluding the time taken for the journey
from the place of arrest to the place where the
Magistrate who is competent to try the case
sits. If he cannot so produce the accused and
the investigation is incomplete, the officer is
duty bound to produce the arrested person
before the nearest Magistrate. The nearest
Magistrate may or may not have jurisdiction. He
may order the continued detention of the
arrested person based on the request for
remand. He would largely rely on the entries in
the case diary and on being satisfied of the
need for such remand which must be manifested
by reasons. The Magistrate can order police
custody during the first 15 days (in cases
131
under UAPA, the first 30 days). Beyond such
period, the Magistrate may direct detention
which is described as judicial custody or such
other custody as he may think fit. It is, no
doubt, open to a Magistrate to refuse police
custody completely during the first 15 days. He
may give police custody during the first 15
days not in one go but in instalments. It is
also open to the Magistrate to release the
arrested person on bail.
86. The arrested person if detained during the
period of investigation can count this period,
if he is ultimately charged, tried and
convicted by virtue of the provisions of
Section 428 of Cr.P.C. We are not concerned
with custody of the accused during the period
of an inquiry or trial which is a matter
governed essentially by Section 309 of the
Cr.P.C. In this context, it must be remembered
132
that it is not every detention which can be
relied upon to get the benefit of set-off under
Section 428. A period spent under an order of
preventive detention being not in connection
with the investigation into an offence cannot
be counted. (See AIR 1977 SC 1096)
87. Detention pursuant to proceedings under the
Army Act inter alia does not count. (See AIR
1987 SC 1646)
88. Thus, detention ‘during investigation’
under Section 428 is integrally connected with
detention as ordered under Section 167.
89. The scheme further under Section 167 is
that custody (detention/ custody) as authorized
under such provisions, if it exceeds the limit
as to maximum period without the charge sheet
being filed, entitles the person in detention
to be released on default bail. In fact, the
person may on account of his inability to offer
the bail languish in custody but he would
133
undoubtedly be entitled to count the entire
period he has spent in detention under orders
of the Magistrate/ Superior Court exercising
powers under Section 167 for the purpose of set
off under Section 428.
EFFECT OF ILLEGALITY IN THE ORDER UNDER
SECTION 167 CR.PC.
90. Now, it is necessary to make one aspect
clear. An order purports to remand a person
under Section 167. It is made without complying
with mandatory requirements thereunder. It
results in actual custody. The period of
custody will count towards default bail.
Section 167(3) mandates reasons be recorded if
police custody is ordered. There has to be
application of mind. If there is complete nonapplication of mind or reasons are not
recorded, while it may render the exercise
illegal and liable to be interfered with, the
actual detention undergone under the order,
134
will certainly count towards default bail.
Likewise, unlike the previous Code (1898), the
present Code mandates the production of the
accused before the Magistrate as provided in
clause (b) of the proviso to Section 167 (2).
Custody ordered without complying with the said
provision, may be illegal. But actual custody
undergone will again count towards default
bail.
91. Take another example. The Magistrate gives
police custody for 15 days but after the first
15 days, (Not in a case covered by UAPA). It is
not challenged. Actual custody is undergone.
Will it not count? Undoubtedly, it will. The
power was illegally exercised but is
nonetheless purportedly under Section 167. What
matters is ‘detention’ suffered. The view taken
in the impugned judgment that sans any valid
authorisation/ order of the Magistrate
135
detaining the Appellant there cannot be custody
for the purpose of Section 167 does not appear
to us to be correct. The finding that if any
illegality afflicts the authorisation, it will
render the ‘detention’ not authorised is
inconsistent with our conclusion as aforesaid.
92. Therefore, if the Court purports to invoke
and act under Section 167, the detention will
qualify even if there is illegality in the
passing of the order. What matter in such cases
is the actual custody.
93. However, when the Court does not purport to
act under Section 167, then the detention
involved pursuant to the order of the Court
cannot qualify as detention under Section 167.
JUDICIAL CUSTODY AND POLICE CUSTODY
94. Now, we must squarely deal with the
question as to whether house arrest as ordered
by the High Court amounts to custody within the
136
meaning of Section 167 of the Cr.P.C.
Undoubtedly custody in the said provision is
understood as ordinarily meaning police custody
and judicial custody. The period of custody
begins not from the time of arrest but from
time the accused is first remanded (1986 (3)
SCC 141). Police custody can, in a case falling
under the Cr.P.C. (not under the UAPA), be
given only during the first 15 days ((1992) 3
SCC 141). During the first 15 days no doubt the
Court may order judicial custody or police
custody. No doubt the last proviso to Section
167 (2) provides that detention of a woman
under eighteen years of age, the detention
shall be authorised to be in the custody of a
remand home or recognised social institution.
95. What is the distinction between police
custody and judicial custody? When a person is
remanded to police custody, he passes into the
137
exclusive custody of the police officers.
‘Custodial Interrogation’ as is indispensable
to unearth the truth in a given case is the
substantial premise for such custody. The
Magistrate must undoubtedly be convinced about
the need for remand to such custody. Reasons
must be recorded. Judicial custody is
ordinarily custody in a jail. It is referred to
also as jail custody. Thus, jail custody and
judicial custody are the same. The jails come
under the Department of Jails and staffed by
the employees of the said department. The
person in jail custody is therefore indirectly,
through the jail authorities, under the custody
of the Court. The police officer does not have
access to a person in judicial custody as he
would have in the case of a person in police
custody. Unless permission is sought and
obtained which would apparently be subject to
138
such conditions as a court places the person in
judicial custody cannot be questioned by the
police officers. Now in a case, ordinarily,
instead of ordering a remand a person can be
released on bail. As to whether a case is made
out is a question to be decided in the facts of
each case. There may be restrictions put in
regard to the grant of bail by law which must
be observed. But if bail is not granted then a
person arrested by the police in connection
with the cognizable offence must be remanded to
custody. This is inevitable from the reading of
Section 167 of the Cr.P.C.
96. In re. M.R. Venkataraman and Others15 , a
petition was filed seeking a writ of Habeas
Corpus inter alia on the ground that the
petitioners were remanded to a central jail of
a district which was other than the one in
15 AIR 1948 Mad 100
139
which there were being tried. The court inter
alia held as follows:-
“On the first point, it seems to us
that no illegality or irregularity
was committed. Section (167)
empowers a Magistrate having
jurisdiction to remand a prisoner
to such custody as he thinks fit.
Section 344 does not use the words
“as he thinks fit” with regard to
the order of remand; but there is
nothing in the section which
suggests that after a charge-sheet
has been filed, the Magistrate has
not the same freedom with regard to
the custody to which he commits the
accused as he had before a chargesheet was filed. The learned
Advocate for the petitioners has
referred to the wording of Section
29 of the Prisoners’ Act, as
indicating that the only person who
can transfer a prisoner from one
Jail to another within the same
province is the Inspector-General
of Prisons; but by its very wording
Section 29 of the Prisoners’ Act
does not apply to an under-trial
prisoner; nor are we dealing with a
transfer of a prisoner. Whenever an
accused is brought before the Court
and the Court issues an order of
remand, the Magistrate has complete
freedom, as far as we can see, to
remand the accused to whatever
custody he thinks fit.”
140
[Emphasis
supplied]
97. The concept of house arrest though familiar
in the law relating to preventive detention,
therein the underpinnings are different. House
arrest in the law of preventive detention is
one which is permitted under the law itself and
such orders are made in fact by the executive.
Also, detention under Section (167) would not
embrace preventive detention in the form of
house arrest as noticed by us in the discussion
relating to impact of Section 428 of Cr.P.C.
98. However, taking the ingredients of house
arrest as are present in the order passed by
the High Court of Delhi in its order dated
28.08.2018, if it is found to be one passed
under Section 167, then it would be detention
thereunder. The concept of house arrest as
ordered in this case with the complete
prohibition on stepping out of the Appellants
141
premises and the injunction against interacting
with persons other than ordinary residents, and
the standing of guard not to protect him but to
enforce the condition would place the Appellant
under judicial custody. Section 167 speaks of
‘such custody as it thinks fit’. If it is found
ordered under Section 167 it will count.
99. In the impugned judgment the High Court
reasons as follows to deny default bail:
(1) The transit remand order came
to be stayed by the Delhi High
Court on 28/10/2018.
(2) The appellant was placed under
house arrest pursuant to the
directions of the Delhi High
court during which period the
investigating officer did not
get the opportunity of
interrogating him.
(3) The High court of Delhi quashed
the appellant’s arrest holding
that the appellant’s detention
is illegal.
(4) Pursuant to the declaration of
the detention as illegal, the
appellant was set at liberty.
It is not as if the appellant
was released on bail but after
being set at liberty, the
142
appellant is protected by an
order of this Court restraining
the investigating agency from
taking coercive steps during
the pendency of appellant’s
challenge to the FIR.
(5) The Hon’ble Supreme Court
having dismissed the challenge
of the appellant to quash FIR
granted 4 weeks protection with
liberty to seek pre arrest
bail/protection before the
Sessions Court. The Hon’ble
Supreme Court granted the
appellant time to surrender
after the appellant failed to
serve pre arrest bail. The
appellant ultimately
surrendered to NIA Delhi on
14/04/2020. Only after the
appellant surrendered, the
Magistrate authorised the
police custody whereupon the
appellant was interrogated.
It further held:
“The CMM granted transit remand on
28.08.2018. The High Court of
Delhi by an interim order having
stayed the transit remand and then
having finally set aside the order
of transit remand thereby holding
the detention during the period
28.08.2018 upto 01.10,2018 (period
of house arrest) as illegal, then,
in our opinion, in the absence of
143
there being an authorised detention
by an order of Magistrate, the
Appellant cannot claim entitlement
to statutory default bail under
Sub-Section (2) of Section 167 of
Cr.PC…”
It goes on to hold:
“It is not possible for us to
fathom a situation where detention
of the Appellant though held to be
illegal & unlawful rendering the
authorisation by the Magistrate
untenable should still be construed
as an authorised detention for the
purpose of Sub-Section (2) of
Section 167 of the Cr.P.C. In our
view sans any valid authorisation/
order of the Magistrate detaining
the appellant, the incumbent will
not be entitled to a default bail…”
Finally, it holds:
“Resultantly, we hold that the
period from 28.08.2018 to
01.10.2018 has to be excluded from
computing the period of 90 days as
the said custody has been held to
be unsustainable in law by the High
Court of Delhi.”
144
DOES THE MAGISTRATE/ COURT CONSIDER THE
LEGALITY OF ARREST/ DETENTION WHILE ACTING
UNDER SECTION (167).
100. The High Court of Delhi in its judgment
dated 01.10.2018 has found that the order of
remand is illegal as there was violation of
Article 22(1). Article 22(1) creates a
fundamental right on a person arrested to be
not detained without being informed as soon as
may be of the grounds for such arrest. It also
declares it a fundamental right for the
detained person to consult and be defended by a
legal practitioner of his choice. Now,
detention follows arrest. What
Article 22(1) is concerned with is that the
detention must be supported by the fulfilment
of the rights referred to therein. Strictly
speaking, therefore, Article 22(1) does not go
to the legality of the arrest.
145
101. Now, as far as the non-fulfilment of
the conditions under Article 22(1) and the duty
of a Magistrate exercising power to remand, we
notice the judgment of this Court rendered by a
Bench of three learned Judges in The matter
of: Madhu Limaye and Others;
16. Therein, the
petitioners were arrested apparently for
offence under Section 188 of the IPC which was
non-cognizable. The officer did not give the
arrested persons the reasons for their arrest
or information about the offences for which
they had been taken into custody. this was a
case where the Magistrate offered to release
the petitioners on bail but on the petitioners
refusing to furnish bail, the Magistrate
remanded them to custody. The proceeding before
this Court was under Article 32. It was in
fact, initiated on a letter complaining that
the arrest and detention were illegal. It was
16(1969)1 SCC 292
146
contended that the arrests were illegal as they
were arrested for offences which were noncognizable. In fact, it was found that the
arrest were effected without specific order of
Magistrate. It was also contended that Article
22(1) was violated. What is relevant is the
following discussion:-
“12. Once it is shown that the
arrests made by the police
officers were illegal, it was
necessary for the State to
establish that at the stage of
remand the Magistrate directed
detention in jail custody after
applying his mind to all relevant
matters. This the State has
failed to do. The remand orders
are patently routine and appear
to have been made mechanically.
All that Mr Chagla has said is
that if the arrested persons
wanted to challenge their
legality the High Court should
have been moved under appropriate
provisions of the Criminal
Procedure Code. But it must be
remembered that Madhu Limaye and
others have, by moving this Court
under Article 32 of the
Constitution, complained of
detention or confinement in jail
147
without compliance with the
constitutional and legal
provisions. If their detention in
custody could not continue after
their arrest because of the
violation of Article 22(1) of the
Constitution they were entitled
to be released forthwith. The
orders of remand are not such as
would cure the constitutional
infirmities. This disposes of the
third contention of Madhu
Limaye.”
102. We may further notice that in In Arnesh
Kumar vs. State of Bihar and Another;
17, this
Court taking note of indiscriminate arrests
issued certain directions. We may notice: -
“8.2. Before a Magistrate
authorises detention under Section
167 CrPC, he has to be first
satisfied that the arrest made is
legal and in accordance with law
and all the constitutional rights
of the person arrested are
satisfied. If the arrest effected
by the police officer does not
satisfy the requirements of Section
41 of the Code, Magistrate is dutybound not to authorise his further
detention and release the accused.
In other words, when an accused is
17 (2014) 8 SCC 273
148
produced before the Magistrate, the
police officer effecting the arrest
is required to furnish to the
Magistrate, the facts, reasons and
its conclusions for arrest and the
Magistrate in turn is to be
satisfied that the condition
precedent for arrest under Section
41 CrPC has been satisfied and it
is only thereafter that he will
authorise the detention of an
accused.
8.3. The Magistrate before
authorising detention will record
his own satisfaction, may be in
brief but the said satisfaction
must reflect from his order. It
shall never be based upon the ipse
dixit of the police officer, for
example, in case the police officer
considers the arrest necessary to
prevent such person from committing
any further offence or for proper
investigation of the case or for
preventing an accused from
tampering with evidence or making
inducement, etc. the police officer
shall furnish to the Magistrate the
facts, the reasons and materials on
the basis of which the police
officer had reached its conclusion.
Those shall be perused by the
Magistrate while authorising the
detention and only after recording
his satisfaction in writing that
the Magistrate will authorise the
detention of the accused.”
149
103. In terms of paragraph 8.2, it is clear
that if the arrest does not satisfy the
requirements of Section 41, the Magistrate is
duty bound not to authorize further detention.
The Magistrate is to be satisfied that the
condition precedent for arrest under Section 41
of the CrPC has being satisfied. He must also
be satisfied that all the constitutional rights
of the person arrested are satisfied.
Therefore, it is not as if an arrest becomes a
fait accompli, however, illegal it may be, and
the Magistrate mechanically and routinely
orders remand. On the other hand, the
Magistrate is to be alive to the need to
preserve the liberty of the accused guaranteed
under law even in the matter of arrest and
detention before he orders remand. This is no
doubt apart from being satisfied about the
continued need to detain the accused.
150
CUSTODY UNDERGONE UNDER ORDERS OF
SUPERIOR COURTS IN HABEAS CORPUS
PETITIONS. IS THE CR.P.C APPLICABLE TO WRIT
PETITIONS?
104. We have noticed that there is no
absolute taboo against an order of remand being
challenged in a habeas corpus petition. Should
the remand be absolutely illegal or be
afflicted with vice of lack of jurisdiction
such a writ would lie? If it is established in
a case that the order of remand is passed in an
absolutely mechanical manner again it would
lie. Now in such cases the person would be in
custody pursuant to the remand ordinarily. What
would be the position if the writ court were to
modify the order of remand passed by the
magistrate. Take a case where police custody is
ordered by the Magistrate. By an interim order
of the High court let us take it the High Court
provides for judicial custody. It is done after
the accused undergoes police custody for 5
151
days. Finally, the writ petition is however
dismissed. What would happen to the period of
judicial custody? Will it be excluded from the
period undergone for the purpose of grant of
default bail? Another pertinent question which
arises is whether Section 167 of the Cr.P.C. is
applicable in writ proceedings. If a writ
petition is not a criminal proceeding, Will
Section 167 apply or does the provision apply
only to the proceedings which arise under the
Code? In the example, we have given if we hold
that irrespective of facts which otherwise
justified including the period of jail custody
as part of the custody under one Section 167,
it will not be reckoned it may produce
anomalous and unjust results. We expatiate as
follows:
In the example we have given the High Court
does not stay the investigation. The petitioner who
152
has been in police custody is made over to
judicial custody by the interim order of the
High Court. The High Court also applies its
mind and finds that no case is made out at any
rate for continuing the writ petitioner in
police custody and then passes the order to
continue the petitioner in judicial custody.
Finally, the writ petition is dismissed. In
such a case where there is no stay of
investigation and in fact even the police
custody was obtained and thereafter the High
Court after looking into the records also find
that the petitioner should only be continued in
the modified form of remand, the custody, which
is undergone under an order of the court being
also ‘during the investigation’ which the
investigation is also not stayed, ought to be
counted.
153
105. Now though the Cr.P.C. will not apply
to a writ petition, what is required to include
custody under Section 167 is that the detention
brought about by the court ordering it during
the investigation into an offence. It is a
matter which will turn on the facts.
106. The crucial question to be answered is
whether the High Court of Delhi was exercising
power under Section 167 when it ordered house
arrest. The proceeding in the High Court was a
writ petition. At the time when the writ
petition was filed, the relief sought was that
a writ of Habeas Corpus be issued to set him at
liberty. The further relief sought was that the
Appellant may not be arrested without prior
notice to enable him to seek appropriate
remedies. As far as the prayer that the
Appellant may not be arrested is concerned, it
is a relief which does not go hand in hand with
154
Section 167 of the Cr.P.C. This is for the
reason that the power under Section 167 is
invoked only after there has been an arrest and
what is sought is the extension of the
detention of the person arrested.
107. Though, this was the position when the
writ petition was filed, by the time, the writ
petition came up for consideration at 2:45 p.m.
on 28.08.2018, the Appellant stood arrested at
2:15 p.m. The Court initially at 2:45 p.m.
passed the following order: -
“4. When the matter was taken up
at 2:25 pm yesterday, Mr. Rahul
Mehra, learned Standing Counsel
(Criminal) for the State of NCT
of Delhi appeared. The Court then
passed the following order at
around 2:45 pm:
“1. The petition complains of the
Petitioner and his companion
Sehba Husain being restrained in
his house by the Maharashtra
Police pursuant to FIR No.
4/2018, registered at P.S.
Vishrambagh, Pune.
155
2. Notice. Mr. Rahul Mehra, who
appears and accepts notice and
informs that he will take some
instructions.
3. The Court is informed by Ms.
Nitya Ramakrishnan, learned
counsel appearing for the
Petitioner, that her information
is that the Petitioner is just
being taken away from his house.
No further precipitate action of
removing the Petitioner from
Delhi be taken till the matter is
taken up again at 4 pm.”
[This is taken from order dated 29.08.2018
extracted in the judgment.]
108. It would appear, in the meantime, the
appellant was produced before the Magistrate
who passed the transit remand order. Thereafter
when the matter was taken up for consideration
at 4:00 p.m. and on noticing the transit
remand, order, dated 28.08.2018, inter alia,
ordering house arrest came to be passed.
Therefore, at the time (4PM) when the order was
passed, the Court was dealing with the matter
156
when the Appellant stood arrested and also
remanded by way of the transit remand order.
109. One way to look at the matter is to
remind ourselves of the contents of the order
dated 28.08.2018. In the said order, we notice
the following portion which we recapture at
this juncture: -
“The Court is also shown the
documents produced before the
learned CMM most of which
(including FIR No. 4 of 2018
registered at Police Station,
Vishrambagh, Pune) are in Marathi
language and only the application
filed for transit remand before
the learned CMM is in Hindi.
However, it is not possible to
make out from these documents
what precisely the case against
the Petitioner is.”
110. The Court further proceeded to direct
that the translations of all the documents be
provided to the Court on the next date
(29.8.2018).
157
111. Now, the direction to supply the
translation could not be complied with as is
the evident from the order dated 29.08.2018
(See para 6 of the said order) as reproduced in
the judgment.
112. Finally, we may notice paragraphs 18
and 19 of the order dated 29.08.2018 reproduced
in the judgment:-
“He is informed that the Supreme
Court has in the said petition
passed an interim order today
staying the transit remand
orders, including the one passed
by the CMM in respect of the
Petitioner, and has ordered that
all those who have been arrested
including the Petitioner shall
continue under house arrest.
In view of the above development,
it would not be appropriate for
this Court to continue
considering the validity of the
transit remand order passed by
the learned CMM. The Court
considers it appropriate to list
this matter tomorrow at 2:15 pm
by which time the order of
Supreme Court would be available.
158
List on 30th August 2018 at
2:15pm.”
113. On the next day i.e., on 30.08.2018,
the Court passed a further order. Therein, in
fact the order recites that the Court was in
the process of pronouncement an order on the
validity of the transit remand and consequently
on the validity of the arrest of the appellant.
It is further stated that the court was
informed by the counsel for the State of
Maharashtra that an interim order continuing
the house arrest of the appellant and some
other similarly situated had been passed. It is
specifically recorded that the dictation of the
order was then halted in order to peruse the
order passed by the Supreme Court. Thereafter,
it is stated that as the Supreme Court as per
the interim order extended the house arrest of
the appellant, the court did not consider it
159
appropriate to proceed with the matter. Orders
of the Supreme Court were awaited.
114. It was further adjourned. Thereafter,
this Court pronounced the judgment on
28.09.2018 and finally, the judgment was
pronounced on 01.10.2018 by the High Court. We
may also notice: - para 5
“5. This writ petition was listed
for hearing today at 2:15 pm
before this Court. It is noted
that the Supreme Court in para 7
of the majority judgment notes
that the Petitioner has filed the
present petition on 28th August
2018 “challenging the transit
remand order passed by the Chief
Metropolitan Magistrate (CMM) on
28th August 2018”. At this stage
it is required to be noted that
although when the writ petition
was originally filed the ground
of challenge was that the arrest
of the Petitioner was in
violation of Section 165 and 166
Cr PC, during the course of
arguments on 28th August 2018 in
light of the developments that
took place subsequent to the
filing of the petition, challenge
was laid to the remand order of
160
the learned CMM. It was further
contended that there had been a
violation of the mandatory
provision contained in Section
41(1)(ba) Cr PC.”
115. The Court went on to find that the writ
petition was maintainable as the writ petition
was entertained at a time when the transit
remand order had not been passed. The Court
finally proceeds to find violations of Articles
22(1) and 22(2)of the Constitution and Section
167 read with Section 57 and also Section 41(1)
(ba) of the Cr.P.C. The remand order is set
aside. The continued detention beyond 24 hours
of the arrest of the appellant, in the absence
of the remand order which stood set aside, was
found untenable. Consequently, the house arrest
of the appellant was pronounced as having “come
to an end as of now”.
116. We have already found that the superior
Courts including the High Court can exercise
161
power under Section 167. The finding of the
High Court in the impugned judgment appears to
proceed on the basis that only a Magistrate can
order remand, does not appear to be correct.
117. Undoubtedly, as pointed out by the
appellant, he came to be detained on the basis
of an arrest carried out by the police officer
from the State of Maharashtra in connection
with FIR No. 84 of 2018 disclosing the
commission of cognizable offences. The arrest
is apparently effected in view of the powers
available under Section 48 of the Cr.P.C.
Finding that an order under Section 167 was
required to produce the appellant before the
competent Court in Maharashtra, he produced the
appellant-in-person before the nearest
Magistrate in Delhi and the Magistrate passed
an order which we have found to be an order of
remand under Section 167. The High Court came
162
to be concerned with the validity of the remand
order and detention of the appellant. A writ of
habeas corpus does lie in certain exceptional
cases even by way of challenging the orders of
remand. If there is non-compliance with
Article 22(1) and the person is detained it is
an aspect which has to be borne in mind by the
Magistrate when ordering remand. Detention is
the result of an arrest. Article 22(1) applies
at this stage after arrest. If fundamental
rights are violated in the matter of continued
detention, the Magistrate is not expected to be
oblivious to it. It is in this sense that the
High Court has found violation of Article 22(1)
inter alia and the Magistrate over-looking it
as rendering the transit remand illegal. As far
as the arrest being made in violation of
Section 41(1)(ba), undoubtedly, it is a matter
which related to the legality of the arrest
163
itself which is the stage prior to detention.
The High Court finds that the Magistrate had
not applied his mind to the question as to
whether the arrest was in compliance with
Section 41 (1) (ba) of Cr.P.C.
118. This is unlike the decision in Madhu
Limaye(supra) where this court found that there
was a violation of Article 22(1) and even
during the course of arguments before this
court, it could not be explained to the court
as to why the arrested persons were not told of
the reasons for their arrest or of the offences
for which they had been taken into custody. In
the said case in fact one of the specific
issues was about the legality of the arrest
both on the ground that the offences being non
cognizable arrest which was illegally effected
by the police officer and also there was
violation of Article 22(1).
164
THE IMPACT OF THE NON-ACCESSIBILITY TO THE
APPELLANT FOR THE INVESTIGATING AGENCY
DURING HOUSE ARREST AND THE EFFECT OF THE
APPELLANT BEING IN POLICE CUSTODY FROM
14.4.2020 TO 25.4.2020.
119. This is the most serious contention
raised by the respondent to exclude the period
of house arrest. The contention is that having
regard to the nature of the proceedings in the
High Court of Delhi during the period of house
arrest, no investigation could be carried out.
The very purpose of custody under Section 167
is to enable the police to interrogate the
accused and if that opportunity is not present
then such period of custody as alleged would
not qualify for the purpose of Section 167. In
other words, the argument appears to be that
the object and scheme of Section 167 is that an
investigation is carried out with opportunity
to question the accused and still it is not
completed within the period of 90 days
165
whereupon right to default bail arises. By the
proceedings on 28.08.2018 when the petition was
filed, the High Court stayed the transit remand
and the appellant could not be taken to
Maharashtra. By the very same order, the High
Court placed the Appellant under house arrest.
No access was provided to the investigating
agencies to question the Appellant. In such
circumstances, the period undergone as house
arrest should be excluded. It is appropriate
that the allied argument, namely, the effect of
the Appellant surrendering on 14.04.2020, being
produced on 15.04.2020 and being remanded to
police custody in which he remained till
25.04.2020, is considered. The argument is that
under the general law, namely, the Cr.P.C.
without the modification effected under Section
43(D) of UAPA, police custody can be sought and
given only during the first 15 days,
166
thereafter, police custody cannot be given. In
the case of UAPA, in view of the modified
application of the Cr.P.C. under Section 43(D)
(2), the period of 15 days stands enhanced to
30 days. Thus, police custody by the Magistrate
can be given on production for a period of 30
days. The argument further runs that if it is
on the basis of the Appellant having
surrendered on 14.04.2020 and upon being
produced before the Court, he stood remanded to
police custody, the period of 90 days would
begin to run only from the date of the remand
i.e. 15.04.2020. If the contention of the
appellant is that the period of remand
commenced with the house arrest i.e.,
28.08.2018, is accepted, it would result in the
police custody given on 15.04.2020 as
impermissible. In this regard, the fact that
the appellant did not object to the police
167
custody being given on 15.04.2020 is
emphasized. The appellant acquiesced in the
police custody commencing from 15.04.2020.
This is possible only on the basis that the
period of 90 days would commence only on
15.04.2020 in terms of the law laid down in
Chaganti Satyanarayana(supra).
120. Per contra, the case of the appellant
is as follows: -
There is no requirement in law that the person
should be granted police custody in all cases.
Section 167 of Cr.P.C. confers a power with the
Magistrate to grant either police or other
custody (judicial custody) during the first 15
days in a case not covered by UAPA. After the
first period of 15 days, undoubtedly, custody
cannot be police custody but there is no
requirement that any police custody at all
should be given. It is entirely with the
168
Magistrate/ Court to determine as to whether
the custody should be police or judicial.
Furthermore, it is contended that in this case,
the offences under UAPA are the main offences.
A period of 30 days is available by way of
police custody. It is open to the investigator
to seek police custody at any time.
It is contended that in any event, a
reading of the second proviso under Section
43(D)(2)(b) of the UAPA shows that in cases
under the said act for the purpose of
investigation, police custody can be sought any
time and is not limited by 30 days/ 15 days
period. It is submitted that the principle in
Central Bureau of Investigation,Special
Investigation Cell(supra) that police custody
is limited to the first 15 days of remand, does
not apply. It is further contended that there
was no stay of investigation and police could
169
have sought access to the appellant during the
30 days period of interrogation or
investigation but this was not done. It is also
seen contended in the written submissions that
the second proviso to Section 43(2)(D) of UAPA
nullifies the judgment in Anupam Kulkarni
(supra) in UAPA cases and custody can,
therefore, be sought at any time even from
judicial custody without the limit of first 15
days or even 30 days. The requirement of an
affidavit in terms of the proviso arises only
when custody is taken by the police from
judicial custody. It was open to the
investigating agency to file such an affidavit
and seek such custody or even the permission to
interrogate during the period of house arrest
which was not done. It is seen further
contended that on 14.04.2020, the appellant
surrendered before the NIA i.e. police custody.
170
Therefore, when the police custody was sought
on 15.04.2020 and extended again on 21.04.2020,
there is no transfer from judicial custody to
police custody. Therefore, it is contended that
the police custody was not under the second
proviso to Section 43(D)(2)(b). This explains
why no affidavit as required thereunder was
filed by the police. The conduct of the
appellant in not objecting to the application
seeking police custody cannot defeat the case
for counting the period of 34 days of house
arrest. The appellant was indeed in police
custody on 28.08.2018 for the purpose of
investigation. All his devices were seized by
the investigating agency who had spent several
hours at his house and restrained him from
morning till 2:15 P.M. when they proceeded with
him to the Magistrate.
171
121. The scheme of the law (Cr.P.C.) is that
when a person is arrested without warrant in
connection with a cognizable offence,
investigation is expected to be completed
within 24 hours from his arrest. If the
investigation is not completed, as is
ordinarily the case, the accused must be
produced before the Magistrate who is nearest
from the place of arrest irrespective of
whether he is having jurisdiction or not. The
Magistrate on the basis of the entries in the
case diary maintained by the officer is
expected to apply his mind and decide whether
the accused is to be remanded or not. If the
police makes a request for police custody which
is accepted then an order is to be passed and
reasons are to be recorded under Section
167(3). Police custody is an important tool in
appropriate cases to carry on an effective
172
investigation. It has several uses. It
includes questioning the accused with reference
to the circumstances, and obtaining if
possible, statements which are relevant in the
future prosecution. Custodial interrogation in
some cases is clearly a dire need to give a
prosecution and therefore the courts a complete
picture. The contention of the appellant that
it is always open to Magistrate to order only
judicial custody and even exclusively with 90
days of judicial custody alone, an application
for default bail would lie cannot be disputed.
Whatever be the nature of the custody as long
as it falls within four walls of Section 167,
if the requisite number of days are spent in
police/ judicial custody/ police and judicial
custody that suffices.
122. However, that may not mean applying the
functional test or bearing in mind the object
173
of the law that the purpose of obtaining police
custody is lost sight of. According to the
appellant, the period of house arrest is to be
treated as judicial custody on the terms of the
order dated 28.08.2018 as subsequently
extended. Investigating officers, undoubtedly,
could go to the house of the appellant and
question him. It is, however, true that if the
High Court had been approached, it may have
directed the appellant to cooperate with the
officers in the investigation. It however
remains in the region of conjecture. The impact
of this aspect, will be further considered
later.
123. We must, in this regard, also consider
the impact of the police custody, admittedly,
obtained on 15.04.2020. The order which is
produced before us would show that police
custody was sought for 10 days. Custodial
interrogation was necessary, it is seen
174
pleaded, for analysing the retrieved electronic
data/ documents from the electronic devices
recovered during the investigation.
124. The special Judge ordered remand for 7
days. Thereafter, a period of 7 days further
remand to police custody was granted by the
order dated 21.04.2020. Still further, it
appears on 25.04.2020, the Appellant was
remanded in judicial custody in which he
continued. The question would arise that all
else being answered in favour of the Appellant
whether his case is inconsistent with the
police remand initially granted for 7 days on
15.04.2020 and further extended on 21.04.2020
which was, no doubt, cut short on 25.04.2020.
The point to be noted is police custody can be
given only for 15 days and that too, the first
15 days, ordinarily. In the case of persons
accused of offences, under UAPA, the maximum
175
period of police custody is 30 days. If the
case of the appellant is to be accepted then it
must be consistent with the subsequent
proceedings, namely, police custody vide orders
dated 15.04.2020 and 21.04.2020. In other
words, Section 167 of the Cr.P.C. as modified
by Section 43(D)(2) of UAPA, contemplates that
remand to police custody on production of the
accused can be given only during the first 30
days from the date of production and it
advances the case of the respondent that remand
on production of the accused before the Special
Judge took place only with the production of
the accused on 15.04.2020. If the remand in the
case of the appellant took place in the year
2018 then it would be completely inconsistent
with the remand to police custody well beyond
the first 30 days of the remand in the year
2018.
176
125. The answer of the Appellant is that
apart from the period of 15 days being
supplanted by 30 days under UAPA, police
custody can be sought and granted at any time
in cases involving UAPA. It appears to be the
Appellants case in one breath that this is
possible under the second proviso contemplated
in Section 43(2)(b) of UAPA. It is seen
contended, that unlike the cases generally
covered by the Cr.P.C., police custody can be
sought in cases under UAPA at any time. It is
also contended however that, it is only if a
person is in judicial custody and the
investigator wants to get police custody in
place of judicial custody that an affidavit is
required. In this case, it is the case of the
appellant that there is no such affidavit. This
is for the reason that when police custody was
sought on 15.04.2020, the appellant was not in
177
judicial custody. He had surrendered on the
previous day i.e. on 14.04.2020 before the NIA.
It is, therefore, to resolve this controversy
necessary to find out whether the case of the
Appellant that the police custody can be sought
at any time in cases falling under UAPA is
tenable.
126. Section 43 D(2) of UAPA reads as
follows:-
” (2) Section 167 of the Code shall
apply in relation to a case
involving an offence punishable
under this Act subject to the
modification that in sub-section
(2), —
(a) the references to “fifteen
days”, “ninety days” and “sixty
days”, wherever they occur, shall
be construed as references to
“thirty days”, “ninety days” and
“ninety days” respectively; and
(b) after the proviso, the
following provisos shall
be inserted, namely:—
178
“Provided further that if it is not
possible to complete the
investigation within the said
period of ninety days, the Court
may if it is satisfied with the
report of the Public Prosecutor
indicating the progress of the
investigation and the specific
reasons for the detention of the
accused beyond the said period of
ninety days, extend the said period
up to one hundred and eighty days:
Provided also that if the police
officer making the investigation
under this Act, requests, for the
purposes of investigation, for
police custody from judicial
custody of any person in judicial
custody, he shall file an affidavit
stating the reasons for doing so
and shall also explain the delay,
if any, for requesting such police
custody”.
127. Under Section 43(D)(2)(a), it is clear
that the maximum period of police custody which
is permissible has been increased from 15 days
to 30 days. The further modification is that
which is relevant which is incorporated in the
179
second proviso. It contemplates that the
investigating officer can seek with reasons and
explaining the delay obtain the police custody
of a person who is in judicial custody.
128. We would think that the position under
Section 167 as applicable in cases under UAPA
is as follows:-
Undoubtedly, the period of 30 days is
permissible by way of police custody. This
Court will proceed on the basis that the
legislature is aware of the existing law when
it brings the changes in the law. In other
words, this Court had laid down in Anupam
Kulkarni (supra), inter alia, that under
Section 167 which provides for 15 days as the
maximum period of police custody, the custody
of an accused with the police can be given
only during the first 15 days from the date
of the remand by the Magistrate. Beyond 15
180
days, the remand can only be given to
judicial custody. Ordinarily, since the
period of 15 days has been increased to 30
days, the effect would be that in cases
falling under UAPA applying the principle
declared in (1992) 3 SCC 141, the
investigating officer in a case under UAPA,
can get police custody for a maximum period
of 30 days but it must be within the first 30
days of the remand. In this regard, the
number of days alone is increased for
granting remand to police custody. The
principle that it should be the first 30 days
has not been altered in cases under UAPA.
As far as the second proviso in Section
43(D)(2)(b) is concerned, it does bring about
an alteration of the law in Anupam Kulkarni
(supra). It is contemplated that a person who
is remanded to judicial custody and NIA has not
181
been given police custody during the first 30
days, on reasons being given and also on
explaining the delay, Court may grant police
custody. The proviso brings about the change in
the law to the extent that if a person is in
judicial custody on the basis of the remand,
then on reasons given, explaining the delay, it
is open to the Court to give police custody
even beyond 30 days from the date of the first
remand. We may notice that Section 49 (2) of
Prevention of Terrorism Act is pari materia
which has been interpreted by this Court in AIR
2004 SC 3946 and the decision does not advance
the case of Appellant though that was a case
where the police custody was sought of a person
in judicial custody but beyond 30 days.
In this regard, it would appear that the
appellant had surrendered on 14.04.2020. He
was not in judicial custody. He was produced
182
with a remand report seeking police custody on
15.04.2020. Treating this as a remand sought
within the first 30 days, a remand is ordered
for a period of 7 days initially. There is no
dispute that the period was police custody. We
may notice that an accused under UAPA may be
sent to judicial custody, police custody or
granted bail. If the argument that the police
custody can be sought at any time and it is
not limited to cases where there is judicial
custody, it will go against the clear terms of
the proviso and even a person who is bailed
out can after 30 days be remanded to police
custody. This is untenable. The case of the
appellant that the police custody granted on
15.04.2020 was permissible and consistent with
his case does not appear to be correct.
THE DECISION IN (2007) 5 SCC 773
183
129. The High Court placed considerable
reliance on the judgment reported in State of
West Bengal v. Dinesh Dalmia18. So also the
Additional Solicitor General, Shri Raju. In the
said case, the Respondent was arrested in New
Delhi. He was produced before the Magistrate on
transit remand in Chennai. The Investigating
Officer, in cases in Calcutta, prayed for
production warrant before the Court at Calcutta
as the Respondent was arrested and detained in
the CBI case before the Magistrate at Chennai.
The said prayer was allowed and the order was
sent to the Court at Chennai. There was a
further order by the Calcutta Court issued that
the Respondent should not be released in the
CBI cases in Chennai. The Respondent also came
to know that he was wanted in two more cases
pending in Calcutta. He voluntarily surrendered
before the Magistrate in Chennai. It was on the
18(2007) 5 SC 773
184
basis of the cases at Calcutta. The Respondent
stood remanded to judicial custody till
13.03.2006. Finally, after the procedures were
under gone the Respondent was produced before
the Magistrate at Calcutta. The Investigating
Officer in the case at Calcutta sought police
custody of 15 days. The Respondent moved for
bail contending that he had surrendered in the
Court at Chennai and the period of 15 days had
elapsed from the date of surrender. Finally,
the matter reached before the Calcutta High
Court against the order of the Magistrate
rejecting the application for bail and ordering
police custody. The Calcutta High Court in the
revision filed by the Respondent found that
more than 90 days, had expired from the time of
the detention which should have been counted
from 27.02.2006 when the Respondent had
surrendered before the Court at Chennai.
185
Therefore, the question for consideration
before this Court was whether the period of
detention started from 27.02.2006 when the
Respondent had surrendered before the Court at
Chennai in connection with the CBI case or
whether it should be counted from 13.03.2006
when the Respondent was actually taken into
custody by the police and produced before the
Magistrate at Calcutta. This Court held that
the respondent having voluntarily surrendered
before the Court at Chennai could not be
treated as being in detention under the cases
registered at Calcutta. The accused, in fact,
it was found continued to be under the judicial
custody in relation with the CBI case in
Chennai. The Court referred to the decision of
this Court in Niranjan Singh & Anr. vs.
Prabhakar Rajaram Kharote & Ors.19 and
reiterated that if there is a totally different
19(1980) 2 SCC 559
186
offence then it will be a separate offence for
which the detention in the previous case cannot
be counted for the purpose Section 167.
130. The present is a case where there is
only one FIR, one case. This is a case where
following arrest and production before the
Magistrate a remand is made which is then
questioned. The High Court orders house arrest.
131. THE CIRCUMSTANCES THAT MILITATE
AGAINST THE ORDER OF HOUSE ARREST BEING
ONE UNDER SECTION 167.
1. The High Court entertains the writ
petition on 28.08.2018. It intended to
dispose of the matter on the very next
day. The order of house arrest was passed
in such circumstances. But there was
custody and what is more, it went on for
34 days.
2. The High Court was unable to go through
the entries in the case diary as the
187
entries were in the Marathi language. In
fact, the court expresses inability to
make out from the documents what
precisely the case against the appellant
was. Translation of the documents were to
be made available on the next day. The
translations were not made available. Yet
the house arrest was ordered until
further orders on 28.08.2018. What is
pertinent is that by the standards in law
applicable to a Magistrate acting under
Section 167, the High Court did not
purport to act under Section 167. This is
different from saying that it acted in
violation of the mandate of law.
3. It is true that there was no stay of
investigation as such. However, what was
challenged was the transit remand. The
FIR was lodged in another state.
188
Interrogation of the appellant would be
integral to the investigation. On the
terms imposed by the High Court in regard
to house arrest it was not possible for
such interrogation to take place. It
appears that the parties did not
contemplate as it is presently projected.
It is no doubt true that the respondent
could have moved the High Court.
4. The house arrest according to the
appellant is by way of modification of
the order of remand. In other words, the
contention is that the High Court stayed
the transit. But the High Court when it
passed the order of house arrest on
28.08.2018, it modified the remand from
police custody to house arrest. Subject
to what follows we proceed on the basis
that the High Court modified the order of
189
remand. The transit remand order of the
CMM Saket provided for police custody
which was to last for two days. But on
the basis of the house arrest ordered by
the High Court by interim order the
appellant underwent house arrest for 34
days. By the judgment dated 01.10.2018
the High Court of Delhi set aside the
transit remand, as the transit remand
ordered by the magistrate was found
illegal. On the said basis the High Court
of Delhi finds that detention beyond 24
hours was clearly impermissible. Now it
is relevant to notice that the CMM Saket
had not ordered detention for the period
after 30.08.2018. Detention was ordered
by him only for two days and the
appellant was to be produced on
30.08.2018. By the order of the High
190
Court of Delhi, the transit could not
take effect. Therefore, the entire period
after 30.08.2018 till 01.10.2018 cannot
be said to be based on the order of the
magistrate. The said period in fact is
covered by the order of house arrest. The
period of house arrest covered the period
from 28.08.2018 based on the order of the
High Court. The arrest was effected at
2.15PM on 28.08.2018. The order of the
CMM was passed within the next hour or
so. The order of the High Court was
passed at about 4.30PM. No doubt, it is
the order of the magistrate which
originated the remand under Section 167
to police custody. The High Court of
Delhi proceeded to find that without the
support of a valid remand order by the
magistrate, the detention exceeded 24
191
hours rendering it untenable in law and
the further finding however is that
consequently the house arrest came to an
end as of then (01.10.2018). Therefore,
the High Court did not proceed to
pronounce the house arrest as non est or
illegal. On the other hand, when it is
pronounced, it as having come to an end
on 01.10.2018 and no part of it is found
to be illegal, it meant that it was valid
from the point of time it was passed till
01.10.2018. If this is perceived as an
order passed under Section 167 then there
would not be any detention beyond 24
hours of the arrest which could be
illegal. The illegality of the detention
is based on the transit order being found
illegal. If the transit order has been
modified as claimed by the appellant,
192
then the detention would be lawful as the
order of house arrest is passed well
within 24 hours of the arrest. We are
highlighting this aspect to emphasize
this as a circumstance to show that the
High Court of Delhi also did not
contemplate that the order of house
arrest was passed by way of custody under
Section 167. No doubt, the foundational
order, the transit remand, being set
aside it could be said that the interim
order will not survive. But then the
order should have been so understood by
the High Court.
5. Undoubtedly, the appellant was placed in
police custody from 15.04.2020 to
25.04.2020. Even the enhanced period of
30 days of police custody, permissible
under Section 43 (D) (2) of UAPA, must be
193
acquired within the first 30 days of the
remand. Proceeding on the basis of the
case of the appellant that the first
remand took place on 28.08.2018, the
appellant being in police custody for a
period of 11 days in 2020 is inconsistent
with appellants case and the law. Though
police custody can be had under UAPA
beyond the first 30 days under the Second
Proviso to Section 43(D)(2), it is
permissible only in a situation, where
the accused is in judicial custody. The
appellant was, admittedly, not in
judicial custody, having surrendered to
the NIA on 14.04.2020, which is on the
eve of the first order directing police
custody.
6. One of the contentions raised by the
respondent is that if the order of house
194
arrest was passed under Section 167 Cr.PC
then the High Court of Delhi would have
after setting aside the transit remand,
either released the appellant on bail or
remanded him to custody. Instead, the
High Court released the appellant on the
basis that as the remand order was
illegal and set aside, in view of Section
56 and Section 57 the detention beyond 24
hours, cannot be sustained. Now in a
proceeding under Section 167 where a
remand order is put in issue before a
superior court it presupposes an arrest
in connection with a cognizable offence.
Now if the remand is set aside by the
superior court, we are of the view that
in a proceeding which originated from a
remand under Section 167, then the order
that would follow on setting aside the
195
remand, would be to grant him bail or to
modify the remand. This is for the
reason that there is an arrest which in
the first place sets the ball rolling.
Therefore, he has either to be released
on bail, if not, he would have to be
remanded. It is here that we may remember
the decision of this Court in (1969) 1
SCC 292 (supra). There was a remand.
Violation of Article 22(1) was found in a
Writ Petition under Article 32. It was,
in fact, a non-cognizable offence, which
was involved. The Court released the
petitioners. The remand orders were found
patently routine and were not such as
would cure the constitutional
infirmities. In the said case, arrest was
put in issue and found bad in law.
196
7. No doubt there is the filing of
application for anticipatory bail wherein
the appellant has clearly projected the
period of house arrest as protection of
this liberty. It was also sought to be
rested under the extraordinary power of
this Court. [We would observe that while
his conduct is not irrelevant in
appreciating the matter, the contours of
personal liberty would better rest on
surer foundation. Estoppel, may not
apply to deprive a person from asserting
his fundamental right. A right to
default bail is fundamental right [See
Bikramjit Singh vs. The State of
Punjab20]. But hereagain, it must depends
upon fulfilment of conditions in Section
167.
20(2020) 10 SCC 616
197
THE KNOT TIGHTENED
132. Now, the argument, which survives is as
follows:
What mattered was that the appellant
actually underwent the actual custody of
34 days by way of house arrest. The fact
that there may have been illegality in
the Order of the Magistrate, will not
take away, the factum of actual custody.
The fact that the appellant was given in
Police custody and he did not object,
cannot defeat appellant’s right. What is
relevant is that a period of 90 days had
run out. It is emphasised before us that
be it the High Court, it could not have
ordered the detention of the appellant
without authority of the law. The only
law, which supports the house arrest, is
Section 167 of the CrPC.
198
133. We have already noticed the
circumstances surrounding the Order passed by
the High Court. We would also, at this
juncture, again capture the Order dated
29.08.2018, passed by this Court:
“Taken on Board.
Issue notice.
Mr. Tushar Mehta and Mr. Maninder
Singh, learned Additional Solicitor
Generals being assisted by Mr. R.
Balasubramanian, learned counsel
shall file the counter affidavit by
5.9.2018. Rejoinder thereto, if any,
be filed within three days therefrom.
We have considered the prayer for
interim relief. It is submitted by
Dr. Abhishek Manu Singhvi, learned
senior counsel appearing for the
petitioners that in pursuance of the
order of the High Court, Mr. Gautam
Navalakha and Ms. Sudha Bharadwaj
have been kept under house arrest. It
is suggested by him that as an
interim measure, he has no objection
if this Court orders that Mr.
Varavara Rao, Mr. Arun Ferreira and
Mr. Vernon Gonsalves, if arrested,
they are kept under house arrest at
their own homes. We order
accordingly. The house arrest of Mr.
Gautam Navalakha and Ms. Sudha
Bharadwaj may be extended in terms of
our orders.
199
Needless to say, an interim order
is an interim order and all
contentions are kept open.
Let the matter be listed on
6.9.2018.”
134. We would think that the reality of the
situation is explained by the said Order. Upon
being informed that the appellant and another
were kept under house arrest, on the suggestion
of the Counsel for the petitioners in the
Public Interest Litigation before this Court,
that he had no objection in three others, if
arrested, they be kept under house arrest, at
their own homes, it was so ordered. It is not
a case where this Court even had in its mind
the duty to go through the entries in the case
diaries relating to them, leave alone actually
going through them. Quite clearly, in respect
of those persons, house arrest even was the
result of the choice exercised by the Senior
Counsel for the Writ Petitioners, who were not
200
the persons to undergo the house arrest. No
doubt, the Public Interest Litigation was
launched to have an impartial enquiry regarding
their arrests. It is thereafter that it was
ordered that the house arrest of appellant and
other (Sudha Bharadwaj), may be extended in
terms of the order. House arrest was,
undoubtedly, perceived as the softer
alternative to actual incarceration. It was in
that light that the Court proceeded in the
matter. That house arrest, in turn, involved,
deprivation of liberty and will fall within the
embrace of custody under Section 167 of the
CrPC, was not apparently in the minds of both
this Court and the High Court of Delhi. This is
our understanding of the orders passed by the
court.
135. Now, here, we are confronted with a
clash between the two values. On the one hand,
201
there is the deprivation, in law, of the
liberty of the appellant, by way of house
arrest for 34 days. On the other hand, it does
not fall actually in the facts of this case
within the ambit of Section 167 of the CrPC,
for the reasons, which have been discussed
earlier. While, the Right to Default Bail is a
Fundamental Right, it is subject to the
conditions, obtaining in Section 167 of the
CrPC, being satisfied. It must be purported to
be passed under Section 167 CrPC. The right to
statutory bail arises dehors the merits of the
case. The fundamental right arises when the
conditions are fulfilled. The nature of
detention, being one under Section 167 is
indispensable to count the period.
136. On the other hand, Article 21 of the
Constitution of India, provides that no person
shall be deprived of his life or personal
202
liberty except in accordance with the procedure
prescribed by law. This Article, creates a
Fundamental Right, which cannot be waived.
Moreover, unlike the persons, who apparently
underwent house arrest on the basis of the
offer made on their behalf, in the case of the
appellant, even prior to the order dated
29.08.2018, the High Court had ordered house
arrest, which constituted house arrest. The
appellant was an accused in a FIR invoking
cognizable offences. He stood arrested by a
Police Officer. He was produced before a
Magistrate. A transit remand, which was a
remand, under Section 167, was passed. Police
custody followed. The High Court ordered that
the appellant be kept in house arrest. The
setting aside of the Order of transit remand
will not wipe out the Police custody or the
house arrest. We agree that illegality in order
203
of the CMM, Saket, will not erase the
deprivation of liberty. But other aspects
already discussed militate against the order
being treated as passed purportedly under
Section 167. There can be no quarrel with the
proposition that a court cannot remand a person
unless the court is authorised to do so by law.
However, we are in this case not sitting in
appeal over the legality of the house arrest.
But we are here to find whether the house
arrest fell under Section 167. We are of the
view, that in the facts of this case, the house
arrest was not ordered purporting to be under
Section 167. It cannot be treated as having
being passed under Section 167.
137. There is one aspect which stands out.
Custody under Section 167 has been understood
hitherto as police custody and judicial
204
custody, with judicial custody being conflated
to jail custody ordinarily.
138. The concept of house arrest as part of
custody under Section 167 has not engaged the
courts including this Court. However, when the
issue has come into focus, and noticing its
ingredients we have formed the view that it
involves custody which falls under Section 167.
139. We observe that under Section 167 in
appropriate cases it will be open to courts to
order house arrest. As to its employment,
without being exhaustive, we may indicate
criteria like age, health condition and the
antecedents of the accused, the nature of the
crime, the need for other forms of custody and
the ability to enforce the terms of the house
arrest. We would also indicate under Section
309 also that judicial custody being custody
ordered, subject to following the criteria, the
205
courts will be free to employ it in deserving
and suitable cases.
140. As regards post-conviction cases we
would leave it open to the legislature to
ponder over its employment. We have indicated
the problems of overcrowding in prisons and the
cost to the state in maintaining prisons.
141. In view of the fact that the house
arrest of the appellant was not purported to be
under Section 167 and cannot be treated as
passed thereunder, we dismiss the appeal.
There will be no order as to costs.
................J.
[UDAY UMESH LALIT]
................J.
[K.M. JOSEPH]
NEW DELHI;
Dated: MAY 12, 2021.
206