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STATE OF RAJASTHAN, JAIPUR versus BALCHAND @ BALIAY

Citation: [1978] 1 S.C.R. 535 · Decided: 20-09-1977 · Supreme Court of India · Bench: V.R. KRISHNA IYER · Disposal: Granted

Cited by 2 judgment(s) · see the full citation network in Lexace

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Judgment (excerpt)

STATE OF RAJASTHAN, JAIPUR 
V. 
BALCHAND @ BALIAY 
September 20, 1977 
(V. R. KRISHNA IYER AND N. L. UNTWALIA, JJ.] 
531 
Bail-Interim bail pending the hearing of an appeal-Guidelines regarding 
grant of-Supreme Court Rules 1966, Order XLVII, rule 6, r/w Orller XX/ 
rule 6. 
A 
B 
The petitioner-respondent was convicted and sentenced by the Sessions Court 
but released after the judgment of the High Court. The petitioner surren-
dered before the trial court as required under Order XXI rule 6 of the Supreme 
Court Rules after leave was granted to the State to file an 
appeal again•! 
C 
acquittal by the High Court and moved an applic,Pon for bail. 
Granting the bail, the Court, 
HEID : The basic rule is bail, not jail, except where there are circumstanccg 
suggestive of fleeing from justice or thwarting the course of justice or creating 
other troubles in the shape of repeating offences or intimidating witnesses and 
the 1ike by the petitioner who seeks enlargement on bail from the court. When 
considering the question of bail, the gravity of the offence involved and the 
heinousness of the crime which are likely to induce the petitioner to avoid the 
1) 
course of justice must weigh with the court.· 
In the instant case the circumstances and the social milieu do not militate 
against the petitioner being granted bail on monetary suretyship at this stage. 
At the same time any possibility of the abscondence or evasion or other abuse 
can be taken care of by a direction that the petitioner will report himself before 
the police station once every fortnight, 
He was on bail throughout the trial 
but was released after the judgment of the High Court, there is nothing to 
suggest that he has abused the trust placed in him by the court. He is not a 
E 
desparate character or an unsocial element who is likely to betray the confidence 
that the court may place on him to tum up to take justice at the hands of the 
court. [536 A·DJ 
OBSERV AT/ON: 
While the system of pecuniary bail has a tradition behind it, it may well 
be that in most cases not monetary suretyship but undertaking by relatiom of 
J 
the petitioner or organisation to which ·he 
belongs may be better and-"morc 
AOcially relevant. 
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Cr!. 
Misc. Petition No. 
1424-1425 of 1977. 
(Application for release on Bail). 
S. M. Jain, for the appellant. 
G 
D. Mukherjee, V. S. Dave, R. C. Tyagi and S. S. Khanduja, for 
the respondent. 
l. Makwana, for the intervener. 
The Order of the Court was delivered by 
KRISHNA IYER, J. 
The petitioner moves for bail having surrender-
ed after leave was granted to the State to file an appeal against acquittal 
by the High Court. 
H 
A 
B 
c 
ll 
E 
F 
li36 
SUPREME COURT REPORTS 
[l 978] 1 S.C.R. 
The basic rule may perhaps be tersely put as bail, not jail, except 
where there are circumstances suggestive of fleeing from 
justice or 
thwarting the course of justice or creating other troubles in the shape 
of repeating offences or intimidating witnesses and the like, by the peti-
tioner who seeks enlargement on bail from the 
court. 'We do not 
intend to be exhaustive but only illustrative. 
It is true that the gravity of the offence involved is likely to induce 
the petitioner to avoid the course of justice and must weigh with us 
when considering the question of jail. 
So also the heinousness of the 
crime. 
Even so, the record of the petitioner in this case is that, while 
be has been on bail throughout in the trial court and he was released 
after the judgment of the High Court, there is nothing to suggest that 
he has abused the trust placed in him by the cour~; his social circums-
tances also are not so unfavourable in the sense of his being a desparatc 
character or unsocial elePJwnt who is likely to betray the confidence that 
the court may place in him to turn up to take justice at the hands of the 
court. 
He is stated to be a young man of 27 years with a family 
tu 
maintain. 
The circumstances and the social milieu 
clo 
not militate 
against the petitioner being granted bail at this stage. 
AL 
the same 
time any possibility of the abscondencc or evasion or other abuse can 
be taken care of by a direction that the petitioner will report him<clf 
before the notice station at Baren once every fortnight. 
'J'hs petitioner will be released. un bail on his entering into a bond 
of his own and one surety for Rs. 5,000/- to the satisfaction of the 
Additional District & Sessions Judge, Barcn. 
Wh

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