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Tuesday, May 19, 2026

Where disputes concerning immovable property substantially involve contested questions of title, ownership and possession, and no prima facie cognizable criminal offence is disclosed upon preliminary enquiry, police authorities may legitimately treat the matter as civil in nature, and the High Court in exercise of jurisdiction under Article 226 ordinarily will relegate the parties to appropriate civil remedies rather than compel initiation of criminal proceedings.

 

AP HIGH COURT HELD THAT 

Constitution of India – Article 226 – Writ of Mandamus – Police inaction complaint – Land dispute involving allegations of trespass and crop destruction – Distinction between civil dispute and cognizable criminal offence – Scope of judicial interference in police enquiry where title and possession are disputed.

The petitioner claimed ownership and possession over Ac.2.74 cents of agricultural land in Survey No.43/23 and alleged forcible interference, trespass and destruction of Eucalyptus crop by unofficial respondents. Complaints were submitted to police authorities seeking initiation of criminal proceedings. The police conducted preliminary enquiry and opined that the dispute pertained to title, ownership and possession, and was civil in nature. The High Court disposed of the writ petition granting liberty to approach the competent civil court.

Held:

A. Where dispute substantially relates to title, ownership and possession of immovable property, police authorities may treat matter as civil dispute in absence of prima facie cognizable offence.

The respondent authorities, upon preliminary enquiry, found pending civil disputes regarding possession and title over the subject property and therefore declined criminal intervention. Paras 4-5.

B. Writ jurisdiction under Article 226 is ordinarily not invoked for adjudication of disputed questions relating to possession and title over immovable property.

The Court accepted the submission that adjudication of competing rights over land falls within domain of competent civil court. Para 5.

C. Mere allegations of interference in property disputes do not automatically warrant criminal prosecution when underlying dispute is essentially civil.

The Court did not find grounds to compel initiation of criminal proceedings merely because complaints alleging trespass and interference were submitted. Paras 2 and 4.

D. Liberty reserved to seek appropriate civil remedies.

While disposing of the writ petition, the Court expressly preserved liberty of the petitioner to approach the competent civil court in case of interference with possession. Para 5.


ANALYSIS OF LAW

1. Scope of Mandamus Against Police Authorities

The petitioner sought:

  • direction to police authorities,
  • initiation of criminal proceedings,
  • protection of possession.

The High Court examined whether:

  • police inaction amounted to arbitrary refusal,
    or
  • matter primarily involved civil adjudication.

The Court accepted the State’s position that:
the dispute related to:

  • title,
  • ownership,
  • possession.

Thus:
criminal process could not be mechanically invoked.

Paras 1 and 4.


2. Civil Dispute versus Criminal Proceedings

The judgment reiterates the settled principle that:
property disputes involving competing claims over possession and ownership ordinarily require civil adjudication.

The Court noted:

  • mutation proceedings were pending,
  • earlier writ proceedings existed,
  • parties disputed possession and entitlement.

Therefore:
the police were justified in treating the matter as predominantly civil.

Important principle:

Criminal law cannot become substitute for civil adjudication of land disputes.

Paras 2 and 4.


3. Limited Scope of Article 226 in Property Disputes

The Court refrained from:

  • adjudicating title,
  • deciding possession,
  • granting substantive injunctive relief.

Instead, the Court relegated parties to:

  • competent civil court.

Jurisdictional principle:

Disputed questions of fact concerning immovable property are generally unsuitable for determination under Article 226.

Para 5.


4. Police Enquiry and Prima Facie Satisfaction

The State authorities submitted that:

  • preliminary enquiry was conducted,
  • no prima facie cognizable offence emerged,
  • matter required civil adjudication.

The Court recorded and accepted this submission.

Legal significance:

Police are not bound to register criminal proceedings in every property-related complaint where essential dispute concerns civil rights.

Para 4.


ANALYSIS OF FACTS

1. Petitioner’s Claim

The petitioner claimed:

  • ownership through registered sale deed,
  • possession for nearly 50 years,
  • cultivation of commercial crops.

Para 2.


2. Alleged Interference

According to petitioner:

  • unofficial respondents trespassed,
  • destroyed Eucalyptus crop,
  • attempted forcible dispossession,
  • threatened petitioner repeatedly.

Complaints dated:

  • 10.12.2025,
  • 21.12.2025,
  • 27.03.2026

were allegedly ignored.

Para 2.


3. State’s Stand

The State submitted:

  • preliminary enquiry was conducted,
  • civil disputes were pending,
  • no prima facie cognizable offence was disclosed,
  • dispute involved title and possession.

Para 4.


4. Court’s Final Course

The High Court:

  • disposed of writ petition,
  • declined coercive direction against police,
  • reserved liberty to seek civil remedies.

Para 5.


RATIO DECIDENDI

Where disputes concerning immovable property substantially involve contested questions of title, ownership and possession, and no prima facie cognizable criminal offence is disclosed upon preliminary enquiry, police authorities may legitimately treat the matter as civil in nature, and the High Court in exercise of jurisdiction under Article 226 ordinarily will relegate the parties to appropriate civil remedies rather than compel initiation of criminal proceedings.


Final Holding

The High Court disposed of the writ petition after recording the State’s submission that the dispute was civil in nature and granted liberty to the petitioner to approach the competent civil court for appropriate relief in the event of interference with possession.

Criminal Law – Bail under UAPA and NDPS Act – Long incarceration – Speedy trial under Article 21 – Scope of Section 43-D(5) UAPA and Section 37 NDPS Act – Binding effect of larger Bench precedents – Whether statutory embargo overrides constitutional liberty – Grant of bail despite serious allegations of narco-terrorism.

 apex court held that 


Criminal Law – Bail under UAPA and NDPS Act – Long incarceration – Speedy trial under Article 21 – Scope of Section 43-D(5) UAPA and Section 37 NDPS Act – Binding effect of larger Bench precedents – Whether statutory embargo overrides constitutional liberty – Grant of bail despite serious allegations of narco-terrorism.

The appellant was prosecuted under the provisions of the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, 1967, NDPS Act and IPC on allegations of narco-terrorism, terror funding and association with proscribed terrorist organisations. He remained in custody from 11.06.2020. Chargesheet was filed in 2020, charges were framed in 2023 and more than 350 prosecution witnesses remained to be examined. Bail was denied by the Special NIA Court and High Court primarily relying upon Section 43-D(5) UAPA. The Supreme Court examined the constitutional limitations on statutory restrictions governing bail under special statutes.

Held:

A. Constitutional courts retain power to grant bail notwithstanding statutory embargo under Section 43-D(5) UAPA.

The restrictions imposed by Section 43-D(5) UAPA do not oust the jurisdiction of constitutional courts to grant bail where continued incarceration and delay in trial infringe Article 21 of the Constitution. Paras 21-24.

B. Right to speedy trial is integral facet of Article 21 even in cases involving terrorism and national security.

Seriousness of allegations cannot justify indefinite incarceration of an undertrial where trial is unlikely to conclude within a reasonable period. Delay resulting in prolonged pre-trial detention converts detention into punishment. Paras 19, 21-25.

C. Rigours of special statutes “melt down” where trial is unlikely to conclude within reasonable time.

Reaffirming Union of India v. K.A. Najeeb, the Court held that statutory restrictions under special enactments cannot be used to effect wholesale denial of constitutional guarantees. Paras 21-23.

D. Smaller Benches cannot dilute or circumvent binding larger Bench precedents.

The Court criticised attempts by smaller Benches to narrow the effect of larger Bench rulings without express disagreement or reference to larger Bench. Judicial discipline requires adherence to binding precedent. Paras 2, 26-27.

E. Bail jurisprudence under UAPA must harmonise national security concerns with constitutional liberty.

Though allegations relating to terrorism and narco-funding are grave, constitutional courts are required to balance:

  • societal security,
  • prosecutorial interests,
  • personal liberty,
  • speedy trial guarantees.

Paras 19-24.

F. Long incarceration coupled with uncertain completion of trial justifies grant of bail.

The Court noted:

  • custody exceeding five years and nine months,
  • framing of charge after substantial delay,
  • over 350 witnesses yet to be examined,
  • absence of likelihood of early conclusion of trial.

Such circumstances justified constitutional intervention. Paras 9, 21-25.


ANALYSIS OF LAW

1. Constitutional Override over Statutory Bail Restrictions

The judgment is a major reaffirmation of constitutional supremacy in bail jurisprudence under special criminal statutes.

The Court examined:

  • Section 43-D(5) UAPA,
  • Section 37 NDPS Act,
  • Article 21.

The Court held:
statutory restrictions do not eclipse constitutional guarantees.

The Court reaffirmed:
constitutional courts retain power to grant bail where:

  • incarceration becomes oppressive,
  • trial is unduly delayed,
  • Article 21 stands violated.

Central constitutional principle:

Procedure established by law cannot become mechanism for indefinite pre-trial punishment.

Paras 21-24.


2. Reaffirmation of K.A. Najeeb

The Court strongly reaffirmed:
Union of India v. K.A. Najeeb

The judgment emphasised the famous principle from Najeeb:

“the rigours of such provisions will melt down…”

where:

  • trial is unlikely to conclude within reasonable time,
  • incarceration already undergone is substantial.

The Court clarified:
this was not:

  • equitable relaxation,
  • fact-specific indulgence,
    but
  • binding constitutional doctrine.

Paras 21-23.


3. Criticism of Judicial Dilution by Smaller Benches

A striking feature of the judgment is its discussion on precedent discipline.

The Court specifically examined:
Gurwinder Singh v. State of Punjab

and observed that:
a smaller Bench cannot:

  • dilute,
  • distinguish away,
  • circumvent

binding larger Bench precedent without reference.

Important doctrinal observation:

Judicial discipline forms part of rule of law.

The Court held:
if disagreement exists,
proper course is:

  • reference to larger Bench,
    not
  • indirect narrowing.

Paras 2, 26-27.


4. Article 21 and Speedy Trial

The Court reiterated:
speedy trial is inseparable from:

  • personal liberty,
  • fair procedure,
  • constitutional dignity.

The Court recognised that:
undertrials under special statutes often suffer:

  • indefinite incarceration,
  • procedural stagnation,
  • delayed evidence,
  • prosecutorial delay.

Important holding:

Gravity of accusation cannot indefinitely suspend Article 21 protections.

Paras 19-25.


5. Bail under UAPA and NDPS Act

The judgment harmonises:

  • national security concerns,
    with
  • constitutional limitations.

The Court did not dilute seriousness of:

  • terror allegations,
  • narco-terrorism,
  • terror funding.

However, it held:
severity of offence alone cannot justify endless custody where:

  • trial remains distant,
  • prosecution cannot conclude evidence promptly.

Jurisprudential significance:

Preventive detention through delayed trial is constitutionally impermissible.

Paras 20-25.


ANALYSIS OF FACTS

1. Allegations Against Appellant

The appellant was accused of:

  • narco-terror funding,
  • heroin smuggling,
  • terror financing,
  • links with LeT/HM operatives,
  • conspiracy under NDPS and UAPA.

Paras 5-6.


2. Custody and Delay

The appellant remained incarcerated since:
11.06.2020.

Chargesheet:

  • filed in 2020.

Charges:

  • framed only in 2023.

Witnesses remaining:

  • more than 350.

The Court treated these factors as constitutionally significant.

Paras 9, 21-25.


3. Bail Granted to Co-accused

The appellant relied upon:

  • bail granted to co-accused,
  • parity principle,
  • similar accusations against others already enlarged on bail.

Paras 9.5, 11.1-11.3.


4. Prosecution Stand

NIA opposed bail on grounds:

  • gravity of allegations,
  • terror links,
  • recovery of narcotics and cash,
  • linkage with Pakistan-based operatives.

Paras 10-10.15.


5. Supreme Court’s Constitutional Concern

The Court ultimately focused on:

  • prolonged incarceration,
  • absence of near possibility of trial completion,
  • constitutional protection of liberty,
  • binding nature of K.A. Najeeb.

Paras 21-27.


RATIO DECIDENDI

The statutory restrictions on grant of bail under Section 43-D(5) of the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, 1967 and similar special enactments do not extinguish the constitutional power of courts to grant bail where prolonged incarceration and undue delay in trial result in violation of the fundamental right to personal liberty and speedy trial guaranteed under Article 21 of the Constitution. A smaller Bench cannot dilute or circumvent binding larger Bench precedent governing such constitutional principles without reference to a larger Bench.


Final Holding

The Supreme Court held that prolonged incarceration and absence of realistic possibility of early completion of trial warranted constitutional scrutiny notwithstanding statutory embargo under UAPA and NDPS Act. The Court reaffirmed the binding constitutional principles laid down in Union of India v. K.A. Najeeb concerning grant of bail in cases of delayed trial under special statutes.

Civil Procedure – Partition Suit – Preliminary Decree and Final Decree – Executability – Whether decree can be both preliminary and final – Partition by metes and bounds impossible – Sale of property and apportionment of sale proceeds – Scope of Order XX Rule 18 CPC – Execution proceedings wrongly terminated. The appellant obtained a decree declaring half share in a flat jointly purchased with her estranged husband. The decree also granted possession, mesne profits, appointment of Advocate Commissioner for division by metes and bounds, and in default contemplated sale of the property and division of sale proceeds. The Advocate Commissioner later reported that physical division was impossible. Execution proceedings initiated for sale and apportionment were repeatedly obstructed. The High Court held that the decree was only a preliminary decree and directed the decree-holder to seek a separate final decree before execution. The Supreme Court reversed.

 

Civil Procedure – Partition Suit – Preliminary Decree and Final Decree – Executability – Whether decree can be both preliminary and final – Partition by metes and bounds impossible – Sale of property and apportionment of sale proceeds – Scope of Order XX Rule 18 CPC – Execution proceedings wrongly terminated.

The appellant obtained a decree declaring half share in a flat jointly purchased with her estranged husband. The decree also granted possession, mesne profits, appointment of Advocate Commissioner for division by metes and bounds, and in default contemplated sale of the property and division of sale proceeds. The Advocate Commissioner later reported that physical division was impossible. Execution proceedings initiated for sale and apportionment were repeatedly obstructed. The High Court held that the decree was only a preliminary decree and directed the decree-holder to seek a separate final decree before execution. The Supreme Court reversed.

Held:

A. A decree may simultaneously possess characteristics of both preliminary and final decree.

Though ordinarily a preliminary decree merely declares rights and leaves further proceedings to follow, in appropriate circumstances a decree may be partly preliminary and partly final depending upon the nature of adjudication and executable directions contained therein. Paras 11-13.

B. Substance of decree and not nomenclature determines executability.

The High Court erred in proceeding merely on the nomenclature of the decree dated 13.04.2012 as a “preliminary decree”. Courts must examine the operative clauses and ascertain whether executable rights and remedies have already been conclusively determined. Paras 14-16.

C. Where decree itself contemplates sale in default of partition by metes and bounds, separate final decree may become unnecessary.

The decree:

  • determined shares,
  • granted possession,
  • awarded mesne profits,
  • appointed Advocate Commissioner,
  • provided for sale and apportionment if partition by metes and bounds was impossible.

Once the Advocate Commissioner reported impossibility of physical partition, the executing court was justified in proceeding with auction and distribution of sale proceeds. Paras 15-17.

D. Termination of execution proceedings amounted to illegal exercise of jurisdiction.

The High Court wrongly interdicted execution proceedings and unnecessarily directed filing of fresh proceedings for passing of final decree despite substantial adjudication already existing within decree itself. Para 16.

E. Court reiterated that final decree proceedings need not be separately instituted.

Relying upon Kattukandi Edathil Krishnan v. Kattukandi Edathil Valsan, the Supreme Court reiterated that after passing preliminary decree, trial court should suo motu proceed towards final decree and separate proceedings are unnecessary. Para 16.


ANALYSIS OF LAW

1. Distinction Between Preliminary and Final Decree

The judgment revisits settled principles under:

  • Section 2(2) CPC,
  • Order XX Rule 18 CPC.

The Court reiterated:

Preliminary decree:

  • determines rights/shares,
  • leaves further proceedings pending.

Final decree:

  • completely disposes of suit,
  • works out rights by actual division or executable relief.

However, the Court emphasised that:
a decree may be:

  • partly preliminary,
  • partly final.

The Court relied upon:

  • Shankar Balwant Lokhande v. Chandrakant Shankar Lokhande
  • Bimal Kumar v. Shakuntala Debi

Paras 11-13.


2. Executability Depends on Substance of Adjudication

The Supreme Court strongly criticised the High Court for mechanically relying upon nomenclature.

The Court held:
the determining factor is:

  • contents of decree,
  • operative directions,
  • extent of adjudication.

The decree in present case had already:

  • determined shares,
  • granted possession,
  • quantified mesne profits,
  • provided execution mechanism,
  • prescribed alternative mode through sale.

Thus, executable rights already crystallised.

Important principle:

Courts must examine substance and practical effect, not merely label assigned to decree.

Paras 14-16.


3. Partition Decrees and Impossibility of Division by Metes and Bounds

The Advocate Commissioner reported:

  • flat was incapable of physical division.

The decree itself anticipated such eventuality and directed:

  • sale of property,
  • apportionment of consideration.

The Supreme Court held:
once impossibility of partition was established,
auction became natural culmination of decree.

Therefore:
separate “formal” final decree became unnecessary ritualistic exercise.

Legal significance:

Procedure cannot override substantive justice or frustrate executable rights.

Paras 15-17.


4. Order XX Rule 18 CPC and Suo Motu Duty of Court

The Court reaffirmed the principle from:
Kattukandi Edathil Krishnan v. Kattukandi Edathil Valsan

that:

  • partition suits continue till final decree,
  • separate final decree proceedings are unnecessary,
  • trial courts should suo motu proceed further after preliminary decree.

The Supreme Court observed that:
despite this settled position,
the High Court paradoxically directed filing of another application.

The Court termed the entire litigation history a:
“Comedy of Errors”.

Paras 2, 16.


5. Execution Jurisdiction and Judicial Error

The Supreme Court characterised the High Court’s interference as:

  • legally unsustainable,
  • contrary to decree itself,
  • illegal exercise of jurisdiction.

The judgment demonstrates judicial preference for:

  • practical justice,
  • expeditious enforcement,
  • avoidance of procedural multiplicity.

The Court also reiterated the classic observation:

“the difficulties of a litigant in India begin when he has obtained a decree.”

Para 2.


ANALYSIS OF FACTS

1. Nature of Dispute

The appellant and her husband jointly purchased the flat from combined income.

After judicial separation:

  • appellant sought partition and possession.

Paras 3-4.


2. Terms of Decree Dated 13.04.2012

The decree:

  • declared ½ share each,
  • granted possession rights,
  • awarded mesne profits,
  • appointed Advocate Commissioner,
  • contemplated sale if physical partition impossible.

Para 4.


3. Advocate Commissioner’s Report

The Commissioner reported:

  • flat could not be divided by metes and bounds.

Executing Court therefore initiated:

  • auction process,
  • inter se bidding.

Paras 5-6.


4. Repeated Obstruction of Execution

The respondent repeatedly approached High Court challenging:

  • impleadment,
  • execution process,
  • auction proceedings.

Ultimately High Court terminated execution proceedings altogether and directed decree-holder to seek final decree afresh.

Paras 5-7.


5. Supreme Court’s Final Directions

The Supreme Court:

  • restored execution proceedings,
  • directed fresh auction,
  • permitted parties to participate in bidding,
  • directed adjustment of mesne profits,
  • ordered completion within two months considering appellant’s advanced age.

Paras 17-18.


RATIO DECIDENDI

In a partition suit, executability of a decree depends upon its substantive adjudicatory content and not merely its nomenclature as a “preliminary decree”. Where the decree itself determines shares, grants consequential reliefs, appoints a commissioner, and further provides for sale and apportionment in the event partition by metes and bounds becomes impossible, such decree may operate as both preliminary and final to the extent necessary for execution, and separate formal final decree proceedings need not be insisted upon mechanically.


Final Holding

The Supreme Court set aside the High Court orders terminating execution proceedings, restored Execution Case No. EX-A-1600007/14, and directed auction and apportionment of sale proceeds in accordance with decree and Commissioner’s report. Civil appeals allowed.

Criminal Procedure – Bail Jurisdiction – Scope of powers under Section 483 BNSS, 2023 – Whether High Court while exercising bail jurisdiction can issue general administrative directions governing criminal justice administration – Distinction between constitutional and statutory powers – Limits of judicial directions in bail proceedings.

apex court held that 


Criminal Procedure – Bail Jurisdiction – Scope of powers under Section 483 BNSS, 2023 – Whether High Court while exercising bail jurisdiction can issue general administrative directions governing criminal justice administration – Distinction between constitutional and statutory powers – Limits of judicial directions in bail proceedings.

The Supreme Court considered legality of directions issued by the Allahabad High Court while rejecting a bail application, whereby the High Court directed trial courts and State authorities to implement systemic measures regarding execution of summons, coercive processes and witness production. The impugned directions were founded upon earlier bail orders in Bhanwar Singh and Jitendra, wherein extensive directions had been issued to State authorities regarding departmental accountability and criminal process administration. The Supreme Court examined whether such directions could validly be issued while exercising jurisdiction under Section 483 BNSS, 2023.

Held:

A. Jurisdiction under Section 483 BNSS is confined to consideration of grant or refusal of bail.

While exercising powers under Section 483 BNSS, the High Court or Sessions Court is concerned only with the question whether the accused should be released on bail or continue in custody. The provision does not authorise issuance of wide-ranging administrative or policy directions unrelated to adjudication of bail. Paras 5-7.

B. High Court exercising statutory bail jurisdiction cannot enlarge scope of proceedings by invoking constitutional status.

Though High Court is a constitutional court, when exercising powers under a statute, its authority remains confined to statutory contours. Constitutional powers and statutory powers are distinct and cannot overlap so as to enlarge statutory jurisdiction beyond legislative limits. Para 7.

C. Constitutional powers cannot overshadow statutory limitations.

The Supreme Court reiterated that constitutional powers emanate directly from the Constitution, whereas statutory powers are derivative and confined to the four corners of the enabling enactment. Exercise of statutory jurisdiction contrary to statutory limits constitutes jurisdictional error. Para 7.

D. Administrative directions issued in earlier bail proceedings were unsustainable.

Directions concerning:

  • departmental accountability,
  • witness production,
  • summons execution,
  • police monitoring mechanisms,
  • process registers,
  • nodal officers,
    issued during bail proceedings exceeded permissible scope of bail jurisdiction and were liable to be set aside. Paras 4, 7-8.

E. However, administrative measures already undertaken by State may continue independently.

The Court clarified that although judicial directions were set aside for want of jurisdiction, administrative mechanisms already evolved by State authorities may continue independently subject to applicable law. Para 8.


ANALYSIS OF LAW

1. Scope of Bail Jurisdiction under Section 483 BNSS

The central legal issue concerned:

  • limits of bail jurisdiction,
  • extent of judicial authority in bail proceedings.

The Supreme Court held that Section 483 BNSS is narrowly structured.

The provision authorises the Court only to:

  • grant bail,
  • refuse bail,
  • impose conditions,
  • modify bail conditions,
  • cancel bail.

The Court categorically held:
bail jurisdiction cannot become a platform for:

  • criminal justice reform,
  • police administration restructuring,
  • procedural governance directions,
  • statewide administrative mandates.

Principle laid down:

Jurisdiction must remain confined to statutory subject matter.

Paras 5-6.


2. Distinction Between Constitutional and Statutory Powers

The judgment contains an important exposition on:

  • constitutional powers,
  • statutory powers,
  • institutional competence.

The Court explained:

Constitutional powers:

  • flow directly from Constitution,
  • are sovereign in nature,
  • cannot be curtailed by ordinary legislation.

Examples:

  • Article 32,
  • Article 85,
  • Article 200.

Statutory powers:

  • are delegated and derivative,
  • exist only within statute,
  • are confined by legislative intent.

The Court emphasized:
even constitutional courts must respect statutory boundaries while exercising statutory jurisdiction.

Key doctrinal holding:

Possession of constitutional status does not automatically constitutionalise every exercise of jurisdiction.

Para 7.


3. Jurisdictional Error Doctrine

The Court characterised the High Court’s action as:

  • jurisdictional overreach,
  • exercise beyond statutory competence.

The Court relied upon:
State of U.P. v. Anurudh

In Anurudh, the Supreme Court had similarly disapproved far-reaching directions issued in bail proceedings concerning age determination under POCSO matters.

The Court reaffirmed:
statutory jurisdiction cannot be expanded by invoking:

  • Article 21,
  • constitutional values,
  • public interest concerns.

unless law itself permits such enlargement.

Important principle:

Good intentions cannot validate jurisdictional excess.

Paras 7-8.


4. Separation Between Adjudicatory and Administrative Domains

The judgment draws a clear boundary between:

  • adjudicatory functions,
    and
  • executive administration.

The impugned directions included:

  • creation of nodal officers,
  • process monitoring systems,
  • accountability mechanisms,
  • departmental disciplinary frameworks,
  • maintenance of witness registers,
  • statewide police supervision.

The Supreme Court held:
such governance structures fall primarily within executive/administrative sphere and cannot be judicially legislated in collateral bail proceedings.

Jurisprudential importance:

The judgment reinforces:

  • separation of powers,
  • institutional discipline,
  • procedural restraint.

Paras 4-8.


5. Limited Preservation of Administrative Measures

Interestingly, despite setting aside judicial directions, the Court preserved:

  • administrative systems voluntarily evolved by State authorities.

The Court allowed:

  • summons monitoring systems,
  • nodal mechanisms,
  • process execution structures

to continue independently.

Thus, the Court distinguished:

  • invalidity of judicial mandate,
    from
  • possible administrative validity of executive action.

Para 8.


ANALYSIS OF FACTS

1. Bail Proceedings Before Allahabad High Court

The appellant’s second bail application was rejected.

While dismissing bail, the High Court:

  • directed trial courts to issue summons/coercive processes,
  • ordered compliance with earlier judicial directions,
  • incorporated executive circulars as judicial mandates.

Paras 2-4.


2. Earlier Bail Orders in Bhanwar Singh and Jitendra

In earlier bail matters, the High Court:

  • expressed concern regarding delay in criminal trials,
  • sought affidavits from Home Secretary and DGP,
  • framed extensive procedural accountability mechanisms.

The State thereafter issued:

  • nodal officer systems,
  • monitoring protocols,
  • process registers,
  • supervisory structures.

Paras 4.


3. Supreme Court Interim Bail

The Supreme Court initially granted interim bail and confined consideration to:

  • legality of directions issued under bail jurisdiction.

Para 3.


4. Supreme Court’s Final Finding

The Court held:

  • High Court exceeded jurisdiction,
  • directions were unsustainable,
  • statutory bail power was improperly expanded.

However:
existing executive measures were permitted to continue independently.

Paras 7-9.


RATIO DECIDENDI

While exercising statutory bail jurisdiction under Section 483 BNSS, 2023, the High Court or Sessions Court cannot issue broad administrative, executive or systemic directions concerning criminal justice administration unrelated to adjudication of bail. Constitutional status of the High Court does not enlarge the scope of statutory jurisdiction, and constitutional powers cannot be invoked to override or expand statutory limits while exercising powers derived solely from statute.


Final Holding

The impugned directions issued by the Allahabad High Court in bail proceedings were set aside as suffering from jurisdictional error. However, administrative measures independently evolved by State authorities were permitted to continue subject to law. Bail granted earlier by interim order was confirmed. Appeal allowed.

Constitutional Law – Public Safety – Stray Dog Menace – Scope of Animal Birth Control Rules, 2023 – Institutional Premises – Interpretation of “street dogs”, “same place” and “locality” – Article 21 – Exercise of powers under Article 142 – Harmonious construction of PCA Act and ABC Rules.

apex court held that 


 

Constitutional Law – Public Safety – Stray Dog Menace – Scope of Animal Birth Control Rules, 2023 – Institutional Premises – Interpretation of “street dogs”, “same place” and “locality” – Article 21 – Exercise of powers under Article 142 – Harmonious construction of PCA Act and ABC Rules.

The Supreme Court considered multiple interlocutory applications seeking modification, recall, clarification and stay of earlier directions dated 07.11.2025 issued in suo motu proceedings concerning stray dog menace in institutional areas such as schools, hospitals, sports complexes, bus stands and railway stations. The principal challenge was to directions prohibiting re-release of stray dogs into institutional premises after sterilisation and vaccination. Applicants contended that the directions violated Rule 11(19) of the Animal Birth Control Rules, 2023 mandating release of dogs at same place/locality from where captured. The Court examined the scope of the ABC Rules, 2023, the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act, 1960 and powers under Article 142 of the Constitution.

Held:

A. “Street dogs” or “community dogs” under Rule 7(2) do not include stray dogs inhabiting sensitive institutional premises.

Rule 7(2) of the ABC Rules, 2023 is merely classificatory and does not confer any indefeasible right upon stray dogs to continue occupying every space including hospitals, schools, colleges, airports and sports complexes. Paras 41-43.

B. Rule 11(19) requiring release at “same place or locality” must be read harmoniously with Section 2(i) of PCA Act.

The expression “same place or locality” in Rule 11(19) is confined to public streets and analogous open-access spaces contemplated under Section 2(i) of the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act, 1960, and cannot extend to restricted-access institutional premises. Paras 44-45.

C. Institutional premises are entitled to be maintained free from stray animals in larger public interest.

Hospitals, educational institutions, transport hubs and sports complexes are sensitive public utility spaces requiring controlled, secure and hygienic environments. Presence of stray dogs therein creates serious risks to safety, health and institutional functioning. Paras 43, 46-47.

D. Directions prohibiting re-release of stray dogs into institutional premises are consistent with statutory framework.

The Court held that exclusion of institutional premises from the re-release mechanism under Rule 11(19) is in consonance with purposive and harmonious interpretation of the ABC Rules, 2023 and PCA Act, 1960. Paras 48-49.

E. Article 142 empowers Supreme Court to issue directions for complete justice.

The Court reiterated that powers under Article 142 are plenary and cannot be curtailed merely by ordinary statutory provisions, though such powers must remain consistent with constitutional principles and public policy. Paras 50-51.

F. Article 21 includes right to safety and secure public spaces.

The Court emphasized that unchecked stray dog presence and dog-bite incidents directly affect right to life, safety, mobility and public health guaranteed under Article 21. Paras 1, 13, 24, 31-32.


ANALYSIS OF LAW

1. Harmonious Interpretation of ABC Rules, 2023 and PCA Act, 1960

The core issue before the Court was whether Rule 11(19) of the ABC Rules mandated compulsory re-release of stray dogs into institutional areas.

The Court rejected a literal and expansive interpretation.

The Court held that:

  • Rule 7(2) is merely classificatory.
  • It does not create vested rights in favour of stray dogs.
  • “Same place or locality” cannot be interpreted independent of parent statute.

The Court harmonised:

  • Rule 7(2),
  • Rule 11(19),
  • Section 2(i) of PCA Act.

The definition of “street” under Section 2(i) became the interpretative anchor.

Thus:

  • “locality” means public-access areas,
  • not restricted institutional premises.

Legal significance:

The Court preferred:

  • purposive interpretation,
  • constitutional compatibility,
  • public safety oriented construction.

Paras 40-45.


2. Institutional Premises and Public Safety Doctrine

The Court recognised:

  • hospitals,
  • schools,
  • colleges,
  • railway stations,
  • bus depots,
  • airports,
  • sports complexes

as “sensitive institutional environments”.

The Court held these spaces must remain:

  • hygienic,
  • obstruction free,
  • secure,
  • risk free.

The Court observed that:

  • children,
  • patients,
  • elderly persons,
  • vulnerable persons

are disproportionately exposed to danger from stray dogs.

Important principle:

Animal welfare cannot override institutional safety obligations under Article 21.

Paras 43, 46-47.


3. Scope of Article 21

The judgment significantly expands public safety jurisprudence under Article 21.

The Court treated:

  • dog-bite incidents,
  • stray dog intrusions,
  • unsafe institutional premises

as constitutional violations affecting:

  • life,
  • safety,
  • dignity,
  • mobility,
  • access to public spaces.

The Court recognised positive obligations of State authorities to:

  • secure institutional areas,
  • prevent preventable injury,
  • ensure safe civic infrastructure.

Constitutional principle evolved:

Public safety from preventable animal hazards forms part of Article 21.

Paras 1-4, 23-26, 31-32.


4. Article 142 and Complete Justice

The applicants argued:

  • Article 142 cannot override statutory provisions.

The Court discussed:

  • Union Carbide Corporation v. Union of India,
  • Prem Chand Garg v. Excise Commissioner.

The Court reiterated:

  • Article 142 is a constitutional power,
  • distinct from ordinary statutory powers,
  • aimed at doing complete justice.

However, the Court avoided direct statutory conflict by holding:

  • its directions were actually consistent with the statutory scheme when properly interpreted.

Thus:

  • the Court harmonised Article 142 with the ABC Rules rather than overriding them.

Paras 50-51.


5. Administrative Accountability

The Court imposed:

  • mandatory obligations upon municipal bodies,
  • district authorities,
  • institutional heads,
  • transport authorities.

The judgment emphasizes:

  • continuous inspection,
  • fencing,
  • nodal officers,
  • removal and relocation,
  • anti-rabies preparedness,
  • SOP formulation,
  • inter-departmental coordination.

Jurisprudential significance:

The judgment converts stray animal management from:

  • discretionary governance
    to
  • enforceable constitutional obligation.

Paras 24-30.


ANALYSIS OF FACTS

1. Background of Suo Motu Proceedings

The proceedings originated from:

  • escalating dog-bite incidents,
  • media reports,
  • stray dog intrusions in public institutions.

The Court took judicial notice of:

  • repeated attacks on school children,
  • patients in hospitals,
  • passengers at transport hubs,
  • athletes in sports complexes.

Paras 1-2, 12-13.


2. Earlier Directions Dated 07.11.2025

The earlier order mandated:

  • removal of stray dogs from institutional premises,
  • sterilisation and vaccination,
  • relocation to shelters,
  • prohibition on re-release to same premises.

Para 25(E).


3. Challenge by Animal Welfare Organisations

Applicants argued:

  • directions violated ABC Rules,
  • re-release was statutorily mandatory,
  • relocation would create “vacuum effect”,
  • infrastructure for shelters was insufficient,
  • large-scale relocation was economically unviable.

Paras 10-28.


4. Counter-position Supporting Directions

Supporting applicants argued:

  • ABC framework failed to control stray population,
  • India witnessed exponential growth of stray dogs,
  • dog-bite incidents and rabies deaths were alarming,
  • unrestricted stray presence violated Article 21 rights of citizens.

Paras 29-37.


RATIO DECIDENDI

The expression “same place or locality” under Rule 11(19) of the Animal Birth Control Rules, 2023 does not include sensitive institutional or restricted-access premises such as hospitals, schools, colleges, sports complexes, bus depots and railway stations, and therefore stray dogs captured from such premises need not be re-released into those areas.

Rule 7(2) of the ABC Rules, 2023 is merely a classificatory provision and does not confer an indefeasible or perpetual right upon stray dogs to inhabit every location where they are found.

The State and its instrumentalities bear a constitutional obligation under Article 21 to secure public and institutional spaces from preventable hazards arising from stray animal menace.

The Supreme Court, in exercise of powers under Article 142, may issue comprehensive directions to balance public safety and animal welfare, provided such directions remain consistent with constitutional principles and purposive interpretation of statutory framework.


Final Conclusion

The Court upheld and reaffirmed the earlier directions dated 07.11.2025 requiring:

  • removal of stray dogs from institutional premises,
  • non-release into same institutional locations,
  • relocation in accordance with humane statutory procedures.

The Court held that the directions are:

  • constitutionally valid,
  • statutorily harmonious,
  • necessary for protection of public safety under Article 21.