Tags Bail

Supreme Court of India (Division Bench (DB)- Two Judge)

Appeal (Crl.), 240 of 2017, Judgment Date: Feb 06, 2017

That detention in  custody  of  under-trial  prisoners
for an indefinite period  would amount to violation of Article   21  of  the
Constitution was highlighted.

                                                              NON-REPORTABLE

                             IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA

                            CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION

                      CRIMINAL APPEAL NO.  240   OF 2017
              (ARISING OUT OF S.L.P (CRIMINAL) NO.7899 OF 2016)


MANORANJANA SINH @ GUPTA                                         .…APPELLANT


                                   VERSUS

CENTRAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION                               ....RESPONDENT
                                  
                                 O R D E R


          Leave granted.


2.       The appellant, a charge-sheeted  accused  in  judicial  custody  in
connection with the infamous “Chit Fund Scam” involving the  Saradha   Group
of Companies (for short “Saradha Group”) has impeached the rejection of  her
prayer for bail by the judgment and order impugned  hereinabove  and   seeks
her  release   pending  further  investigation  by  the  Central  Bureau  of
Investigation (hereafter also referred as “ the CBI”) into  the  said  Ponzi
scheme.

3.      We have heard   Mr. A.  Sharan,  learned  senior  counsel   for  the
appellant and Mr. K. Raghavacharyulu,  Special  Public  Prosecutor  for  the
respondent.

4.      As the preface to this investigation had been laid by this Court  in
its verdict in Subroto Chattoraj vs. Union of India  &  Ors.  (2014)  8  SCC
768, allusion thereto is indispensable.    This  Court  therein  was  seized
with the issue of transfer of several cases registered  in  connection  with
the above scam and registered in different police stations in the  State  of
Bengal and Odisha  from the State police agency to the CBI.   In  traversing
the recorded facts, this Court took note, inter alia, of the  imputed  modus
operandi of the persons and the entities allegedly involved in  the  illicit
operations to allure unsuspecting depositors  to  make  investments  in  the
scheme with the  promise  of  awarding  them  with  attractive  rewards  and
returns, which was never intended and thereby swindle the  gullible  members
of the public belonging to the  middle class, lower  middle  class  and  the
poorer sections of the society.  The interim report(s),  taken  note  of  by
this Court,  amongst  others  disclosed  violation  of  the  Securities  and
Exchange Board of India Act, 1992, The  Companies  Act,  1956,  The  Reserve
Bank of India, 1934 and The Income  Tax  Act,  1961  and  revealed  as  well
fraudulent  certification,   non-compliance   with   accounting   standards,
material  misstatements  of  facts  and  gross-negligence  on  the  part  of
statutory auditors and  divulged that the estimated collection made  by  the
Saradha Group was of several thousand crores.  The  exercise  undertaken  by
the Commission of Inquiry appointed by the Government of West Bengal,  which
received nearly 18 lakh complaints  and  claim  petitions  was  also  noted.
Involvement of high dignitaries did not miss the attention of this Court  as
well.  This Court noted with concern too,  the  failure  of  the  Regulators
like SEBI, Authorities under the Companies  Act  and  the  Reserve  Bank  of
India.  It was recorded that the scam had spread its roots in the States  of
West Bengal, Tripura, Assam and Odisha and had by then  devoured   Rs.10,000
crores approximately  from  the  public  in  general  specially  the  weaker
sections of the society, having fallen prey to the temptations  of  handsome
returns, extended by the companies involved.  That the  collection  of  such
huge amounts from the depositors was neither legally  permissible  nor  were
such collections/deposits invested in any meaningful  business  activity  to
generate the high returns as promised to the depositors was  noted.   Having
regard to the gravity of the situation and the inter-state ramifications  of
such notorious venture,  this Court acceded to the prayer  for  transfer  of
investigation from the State Police to the CBI.  This  Court  underlined  in
the conspectus of the attendant facts that the  investigation  ought  to  be
undertaken in particular to unearth the  larger  conspiracy  angle  and  the
money trail which had since remained unexplored.

5.       Pursuant to the above decision, FIR in  RC-04/S-2014-(SIT)  Kolkata
was registered by the CBI, Special Crime Branch, SIT, Kolkata. In course  of
the investigation  that  followed,  charge-sheets  have  been  submitted  on
17.11.2014,  18.02.2015,  17.04.2015,  14.08.2015   and   3.12.2015    under
Sections 120B, 420, 409 IPC and Sections 4 & 6 of the Prize Chits and  Money
Circulation (Banning) Act, 1978 against various  accused  persons  including
in particular  Sudipta Sen of M/s  Saradha  Reality  India  Ltd.  and  three
other companies namely;  M/s  Saradha  Tours  and  Travels  (P.)  Ltd.,  M/s
Saradha Garden Resorts and Hotels (P.) Ltd. and  M/s  Saradha  Housing  (P.)
Ltd. involved principally in the raising of  funds  from  the  public  under
different investment schemes.

6.        In  the  said  process,  the  appellant  herein  was  arrested  on
07.10.2015  and  was  remanded  to  the  police  custody  upto   13.10.2015.
Meanwhile, however  the  appellant  having  complained  of  chest  pain  and
attendant complications, and on medical advice  was  shifted  to  Government
Hospital, S.S.K.M. Hospital, Kolkata and since then, for  various  ailments,
as conveyed by her, she had remained in different  hospitals  from  time  to
time as on date.

7.       Eventually   the   5th   supplementary   charge-sheet   under   the
aforementioned Sections of law has also been  laid  against  the  appellant,
Sudipta Sen and Santanu Gosh and M/s Global Automobiles  Ltd.  on  4.1.2016.
As  the  forwarding  report  in   connection   therewith   would   disclose,
investigation is still continuing,  under  Section  173(8)  of  Cr.P.C.  The
charge-sheet reveals the accusation that Sudipta Sen  and  others  as  named
therein together with  M/s  Saradha  Reality  India  Ltd.  in  pursuance  of
criminal conspiracy amongst others had  collected  a  staggering  amount  of
Rs.7,74,33,59,929/-  from  various  depositors  under   several   investment
schemes in favour of Sardha Reality India Ltd., by  falsely  promising  them
high returns but did not pay  to  the  tune  of  Rs.569,26,28,095/-  ,  thus
defrauding them.

8.      The charge-sheet so far as is relevant for the present  adjudication
disclose in substance that  Sudipta Sen  with  a  motive  of  expanding  the
illegal deposit collection business of Shardha Group acquired T.V.  Channels
and Newspapers and  entered  into  several  business  deals  in  furtherance
thereof.  In the process, the appellant, who claims to be a  Journalist  and
at the relevant time was not only associated with the  Media  but  had  some
clout on her business in  the  North  Eastern  states,  where  such  illegal
exaction  of  Saradha  Group  was  expanding,  executed  on  09.06.2010,   a
Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with Sudipta Sen representing  M/s  Bengal
Media (P.) Ltd.  In the MOU, the  appellant,  along  with  her  father,  was
depicted  to be the absolute owner of M/s GNN India Limited. conducting  the
T.V. Channel (Rajdhani & Frontier T.V.). Under the said MOU,  the  appellant
and her father agreed to sell and  transfer  50%  share  of  M/s  GNN  India
Limited to M/s Bengal Media Private Limited  at a consideration  of  Rs.  50
crores, in return whereof , she was to be appointed as the  Chief  Executive
Officer of the latter company and further  to be entitled to a  remuneration
of Rs. 15 lakhs per month.  An agreement between  the  parties  followed  on
21.6.2010, substantially in the same lines with  the  elaboration  that  M/s
GNN Indian Private Limited   would issue fresh shares to  M/s  Bengal  Media
Private Limited  valued at Rs.  30  crores  and  further  would  transfer  a
portion of the existing shares for an additional amount of Rs. 12.5  crores.
 The payments were to be made  between 21.6.2010 to  15.9.2010  as  per  the
schedule  agreed  upon.   As  the   charge-sheet   mentions,   investigation
disclosed that in terms of  the  agreement,  the  Saradha  Group   paid  Rs.
21,05,48,136/- to M/s GNN India Private Limited.   It  is  referred   to  in
clear terms  that the payment thus made was from  the   illegal  collections
from the depositors as at that point of time M/s Bengal was  a  loss  making
company and was thus not in a  position to  discharge  such  heavy  monetary
financial liability and thus the  whole  transaction   was  a  dubious   and
counterfeit deal  only to launder  the ill-gotten   deposits  with  ulterior
motive.
9.      That  during 2009-2010, M/s GNN India (P)  Limited   had  almost  no
business activity and that  it had been recording loss during the  financial
year 2010-2013, was also noted.  The  charge-sheet further   discloses  that
the balance sheet of  M/s.  Sarada India  Reality  Limited  was   fudged  so
much  so  that   it   fraudulently  disclosed  that   an   amount   of   Rs.
24,68,85,200/- had been advanced to M/s GNN  India  (P)  Limited  as  Inter-
Corporate Deposits, which was patently false.  According to the  CBI and  as
recorded in the charge-sheet, the petitioner entered into   the  above  sham
deal with a motive of extracting undue  financial benefit being fully  aware
of the   illegal  deposit  collection  business  of  Saradha  Group,  which,
amongst others was demonstrated  by   the  emails  exchanged  by  her.   The
charge-sheet further  divulges that the liasion  between  Sudipta  Sen   and
the appellant  was with a view to use the latter's connection  to  negotiate
the enquiry contemplated  against  illegal  deposit  business  and  also  to
utilise her influence  in  the  media  to  counter  any  negative  publicity
against the  illegal  business  activity  of  Saradha  Group  and  that  the
appellant  actively associated herself in  such  activities  and  criminally
misappropriated  the  ill-gotten  funds,  as  a  party   to   the   criminal
conspiracy.

10.     The charge-sheet   also  records   an  agreement  for  sale  between
Sudipta Sen on behalf of Saradha India Reality Limited  and  Santanu   Ghosh
of  M/s. Global Automobiles for purchase of 58 lakhs equity  shares  of  the
former company at a consideration of Rs. 25 crores.  That there was  also  a
separate agreement  between them, whereunder the liabilities of M/s.  Global
Automobiles Limited were agreed to be taken over  at  a  price  of  Rs.  220
crores   in all, figured as well in the charge-sheet.  This, the CBI has  in
specific terms recorded on the basis  of  the  investigation  that   Santanu
Ghosh had indulged in such transactions being fully  aware  of  the  illegal
deposit collection business  of   the  Saradha  Group.    The  supplementary
charge-sheet  mentions,  to  reiterate   that   further   investigation   is
continuing as per Section 173(8) of the Code  of  Criminal  Procedure,  1973
(for short, hereinafter  to  be  referred  to  as  “Code”)   in  respect  of
influential  accused persons, role of regulatory bodies like SEBI, ROC,  RBI
and other agencies to unravel  the larger criminal conspiracy angle and  the
money  trail.   Admittedly,  this  supplementary   charge-sheet   had   been
submitted on 4.1.2016, as  noted  above  and  though  the  investigation  is
continuing,  there  has  been  no  further  supplementary  charge-sheet   in
between.     Records  reveal  that  meanwhile,  the   appellant   has   been
interrogated by the CBI  in  the  hospital   on  29.12.2015,  20.6.2016  and
14.10.2016.

11.        In  the  above  imposing   factual  backdrop,  however,  in   the
interregnum,  Sudipta  Sen had been granted bail as the CBI  had  failed  to
file charge-sheet within  90  days  of  his  arrest.    Subsequent  thereto,
several other persons arrested have also been released on  bail.   The  High
Court has also granted bail to Santanu  Ghosh,  who  was  also  arrested  on
07.10.2015, in connection with the above case.

12.       It has been insistently urged on behalf of the appellant  that  as
she is in judicial custody for over 15 months and is suffering from  various
ailments requiring constant medical attention, she deserves to  be  extended
the  benefit  of  bail.   Further  as  charge-sheet  against  her  has  been
submitted and she is fully cooperating with the investigation,  her  further
confinement in judicial custody is inessential.  This is more so, as  though
the investigation is claimed to be continuing, no further  charge-sheet  has
been submitted for the last over one year and  that  having  regard  to  the
visible delay in the initiation and conduct of the  trial  in  the  face  of
innumerable witnesses cited, her further  detention  would  be  travesty  of
justice.  Mr. Sharan  has urged that MOU dated 9.6.2010  and  the  agreement
dated 21.06.2010, referred to in the charge-sheet  demonstrate  transactions
 which are purely  of civil  nature and in no way  furnish  the  ingredients
of any  criminal  offence  whatsoever.   According  to  the  learned  senior
counsel for the appellant, not only the evidence collected in course of  the
investigation does not make out any offence as alleged,  in  the  teeth   of
the release of the  principal  accused  persons  on  bail,  the  appellant's
detention amounts to deprivation of her right to life and liberty  enshrined
in Article 21 of the Constitution of India.

13.         Per contra Mr. K.  Raghavacharyulu,  Special  Public  Prosecutor
has assiduously urged that having regard to the mandate  of  this  Court  to
unfailingl  investigate the larger conspiracy angle and determine the  money
trail  of  the  deep-rooted  counterfeit   affecting   lakhs   of   innocent
depositors,  release of the appellant at this stage  would  be  inexpedient.
In controversion, it has been  asserted  that  the  MOU  and  the  agreement
mentioned in the charge-sheet, in the facts of the case are only a front  to
indulge in criminal activities  as  divulged  in  the  investigation.  While
emphasizing that the appellant  since  her  arrest  has  managed  to  remain
housed  in  hospitals,  by  feigning   ailments,   without   suffering   any
incarceration in the real sense, it has been asserted that lastly,  she  has
also given up her plea based on medical ground and thus it is  of  no  avail
or significance for the present.   According to Mr. K. Raghavacharyulu,  her
hospital bills also do not endorse her plea  of  illness  and  treatment  in
connection therewith.   He  has  urged  that  as  the  investigation  is  in
progress, notwithstanding the release of some of the accused persons, it  is
not a fit case to grant bail to the appellant, more so when the Trial  Court
as well as the High Court have rejected her  prayer  to  that  effect  on  a
consideration of all relevant aspects.

14.         We have closely analyzed  the  competing  contentions  and  have
perused  as  well  the  pleadings   and  documents  presently  available  on
records.  In course of the arguments, having noticed  the  emphasis  on  the
ongoing investigation as a factor against grant of  bail,  we  had  required
the learned counsel for the CBI to  furnish  a  status  report  with  regard
thereto  disclosing the updates, for a fair decision.

15.         Accordingly, a status report  had  been  laid  before  us  in  a
sealed  cover,  which  apart  from  the  background  facts  leading  to  the
registration of the case,  arrest  of  the  accused  persons  including  the
appellant and the submission of the charge-sheets as on  date,  has  not  in
very  clear  and  persuasive  terms  indicated  the  specific  issues/areas,
presently being  pursued in the investigation, so  much  so  to  impellingly
justify further detention of the  appellant  in  judicial  custody.   Though
traces of the initiatives undertaken are available  in  the  status  report,
those, in our comprehension, too general in nature.   For  obvious  reasons,
we refrain from dilating further on the contents of the said report.

16.      The recorded facts demonstrate admittedly  that  the  appellant  is
continuously   in  judicial  custody   since   07.10.2015   and   that   the
supplementary charge-sheet  against  her  along  with  others  as  mentioned
therein, had been filed on 04.01.2016 incorporating the  evidence  collected
against those incriminated.  Having regard to the magnitude and  canvass  of
the investigation, it is likely that the exercise would take  further  time.
Though according to the CBI, the ailments of the  appellant  are  not  worth
any weight   as a factor to grant her the privilege  of  bail,  the  medical
records nevertheless suggest  that  she  is  suffering  from  a  variety  of
ailments. Noticeably, the medical records have been issued by the  hospitals
in which she is undertaking  treatment.   We  are  not  unmindful,  at  this
juncture, of the nature of the hospital bills of hers as highlighted by  the
learned counsel for  the  respondent.    Though  it  is  the   plea  of  the
respondent that the appellant  at  times  adopts  a   disposition  to  avoid
interrogation by the CBI, no convincing material has been brought on  record
to demonstrate any misuse of her liberty qua the investigation while in  the
hospitals since her arrest.  As per the medical records, her ailments  range
from ischemic heart disease  to   asthma,  unstable  angina,   dysfunctional
uterine bleeding, constant nausea and lower back pain.

17.          This  Court  in  Sanjay   Chandra   vs.   Central   Bureau   of
Investigation (2012) 1 SCC  40,  also  involving   an  economic  offence  of
formidable magnitude, while dealing with  the issue of grant  of  bail,  had
observed that deprivation of liberty must be considered a punishment  unless
it is required to ensure that an accused person  would stand his trial  when
called upon and that  the  courts  owe  more  than  verbal  respect  to  the
principle that punishment begins  after conviction and  that  every  man  is
deemed to be innocent until duly tried and found guilty.  It was  underlined
that the object of  bail is  neither  punitive nor  preventive.  This  Court
sounded  a  caveat   that  any  imprisonment  before   conviction    has   a
substantial punitive content and it would be  improper   for  any  court  to
refuse bail as a mark of disapproval of a conduct whether   an  accused  has
been convicted for it or not or to refuse bail to an unconvicted person  for
the purpose of giving him a taste of  imprisonment  as  a  lesson.   It  was
enunciated that since the jurisdiction to grant bail to an  accused  pending
trial or in appeal against  conviction is discretionary in  nature,  it  has
to be exercised with care and caution by balancing  the  valuable  right  of
liberty of an individual and the interest of the  society  in  general.   It
was elucidated that the seriousness of  the charge, is no doubt  one of  the
relevant considerations  while examining  the  application of  bail  but  it
was not only the test or the factor  and  that  grant  or  denial   of  such
privilege, is regulated to a large extent by the facts and circumstances  of
each particular case. That detention in  custody  of  under-trial  prisoners
for an indefinite period  would amount to violation of Article   21  of  the
Constitution was highlighted.
18.         In the above factual premise and on an  in-depth  balancing   of
all   relevant   aspects  and  chiefly  the   competitive   imperatives   of
investigation and the right to liberty, we are disposed, for the present  to
grant bail to the  appellant,  subject  to  the  conditions,  as  enumerated
hereinafter.  To reiterate, having regard to  the  materials  available,  we
are of the opinion, mainly in the face of  the  disclosures  in  the  latest
status report, that  presently  further  confinement  of  the  appellant  in
judicial custody is  not  an  indispensable  necessity  for  the  unhindered
investigation, that is in progress.

19.         In the above view of the matter, the appeal is allowed  and  the
appellant is ordered to  be  released  on  bail  in  FIR  RC-04/S/2014-(SIT)
Kolkata of Rs.1 (One) crore  and on furnishing  two local sureties  each  of
the like amount  to  the  satisfaction  of  the  Additional  Chief  Judicial
Magistrate Alipore, Kolkata, West Bengal and also subject to  the  following
conditions :
1)  The appellant would surrender her passport to the Trial Court.
2)    She would not leave the territorial limits of the city Kolkata
      without the written permission of the Trial Court and without
      informing the investigating agency.
3)    She would report before the Trial Court and the investigating  officer
once  a month, till the investigation in the case is completed in full.
4)    She would not in any way hinder or try to influence the  investigation
in  any manner whatsoever and would not endeavor to either tamper  with  any
evidence or  induce/influence/dissuade/intimidate any witness or  deal  with
any record relevant to the case.
5)    She would  cooperate  with  the  investigation  and  would  always  be
available to be interrogated by the Investigating Agency.
6)    Any other condition as the Trial Court may consider to be  appropriate
if and as and when necessary.
7).         We hereby clarify that breach or  non-compliance of any  of  the
above conditions would entail immediate cancellation of  the  bail  granted,
either suo motu or on any complaint made by any quarter whatsoever.
8).   Apart therefrom, such a breach or non compliance would be viewed  very
seriously   and  would  visit  the  appellant   with     stringent   adverse
consequences as contemplated in  law.   The  Trial  Court  as  well  as  the
Investigating Agency are directed to keep continuous vigil in the matter  so
as to, if need be, bring to the notice of this Court any conduct  or  action
of the appellant warranting recall of this order.

20.         We make it clear  that  this order  has  been  rendered  in  the
singular facts of the case and would not be cited as a precedent.




                              .............................................J.
                                                               (ARUN MISHRA)




                               …...........................................J.
                                                               (AMITAVA ROY)


NEW DELHI                                                      
FEBRUARY 6, 2017.
ITEM NO.1A               COURT NO.10               SECTION IIB

               S U P R E M E  C O U R T  O F  I N D I A
                       RECORD OF PROCEEDINGS

Petition(s) for Special Leave to Appeal (Crl.) No(s).  7899/2016

(Arising out of impugned final judgment and order dated  09/09/2016 in CRM
No. 473/2016 passed by the High Court Of Calcutta)


MANORANJANA SINH @ GUPTA                                       Petitioner(s)

                                VERSUS

CENTRAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION                                Respondent(s)


Date : 06/02/2017 This petition was called on for Judgment today.


For Petitioner(s)    Mr. Amit Kumar,Adv.


For Respondent(s)       Mr. K. Raghacharyulu, Adv.
                        Mr. Kailash Pandey, Adv.
                        Mr. Ranjeet Singh, Adv.
                     Mr. K. V. Sreekumar,Adv.

             Hon'ble Mr. Justice Amitava Roy pronounced the judgment of  the
Bench comprising Hon'ble Mr. Justice Arun Mishra and His Lordship.
             Leave granted.
             The appeal is allowed  and  the  appellant  is  ordered  to  be
released on bail in FIR RC-04/S/2014-(SIT) Kolkata of Rs.1 (One)  crore  and
on  furnishing  two  local  sureties  each  of  the  like  amount   to   the
satisfaction of the Additional Chief Judicial Magistrate  Alipore,  Kolkata,
West Bengal  and  also  subject  to  the  conditions  as  indicated  in  the
judgment.


|   (NEELAM GULATI)                |        (TAPAN KR. CHAKRABORTY)    |
|COURT MASTER                      |COURT MASTER                       |


      (Signed Non Reportable Judgment is placed on the file)

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