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Subrata Roy Sahara v. Pramod Kumar Saini and Others

1. Leave granted.

(A.M. Khanwilkar and J.B. Pardiwala, JJ.)

 

Subrata Roy Sahara ________________________________ Appellant;

 

v.

 

Pramod Kumar Saini and Others ___________________ Respondent(s).

 

Criminal Appeal Nos. of 2022 (Arising out of SLP(Crl) Nos. 4877-4878 of 2022), decided on July 14, 2022

 

The Order of the court was delivered by

Order

 

1. Leave granted.

 

2. These appeals take exception to the judgment and orders dated 11.02.2022 and 27.04.2022 passed by the High Court of Judicature at Patna in CRLM No. 8063/2021.

 

3. By these orders, the High Court while entertaining the application for grant of anticipatory bail filed by one Pramod Kumar Saini and other co-accused named in Complaint Case No. 1761 of 2016 went on to inquire into matters unrelated to the facts relevant for deciding the anticipatory bail application.

 

4. This Court vide order dated 13.05.2022, whilst issuing notice, observed thus:โ€”

 

โ€œPermission to file special leave petition(s) is granted.

 

It is urged that the private complaint filed by one Naresh Kumar Das, being Complaint Case No. 1761/2016, is against accused persons named therein. The petitioner has not been named as an accused.

 

Further, the impugned order has been passed against the petitioner on an application for anticipatory bail filed by Pramod Kumar Saini, who has been named as accused no. 4.

 

Issue notice, returnable on 19.05.2022.

 

Dasti, in addition, is permitted.

 

Stay of operation of the impugned judgment and order qua the petitioner herein.

 

We are informed that pursuant to the impugned order, the High Court has issued further orders today, i.e. 13.05.2022, which has the effect of directing the concerned authority in Patna (police) to produce the petitioner before the Court.

 

In terms of this order, we stay the operation of the direction given by the High Court qua the petitioner till 2 the next date of hearing.

 

All concerned to act on this order forthwith until further hearing of this matter.โ€

 

5. Needless to observe that the application under Section 438 of the Code of Criminal Procedure is limited to the cause of the concerned applicant, applying for grant of anticipatory bail in connection with offence already registered against him and apprehending his arrest in connection with such a case for extraneous reasons or otherwise. In such proceedings, the inquiry must be limited to the facts relevant and applicable to the concerned applicant who has come before the Court. No attempt should be made to inquire into matters pertaining to some third party much less beyond the scope of the complaint/FIR in question.

 

6. Even if the application is entertained by the High Court, the High Court should exercise circumspection in dealing with the application only in respect of matters which are relevant to decide the application and not to over-state facts or other matters unrelated to the applicant before the Court.

 

7. In the present case, we have noticed that the High Court kept the application for grant of anticipatory bail pending and issued directions, including to issue notice to third parties to appear before the Court. That, in our opinion, is impermissible and cannot be countenanced.

 

8. The High Court has clearly exceeded its jurisdiction in that regard.

 

9. Accordingly, all the observations or notings made by the High Court in respect of matters unrelated to the case of the applicant before the High Court must stand effaced from the record, in law. The same cannot be looked at or relied upon in some other proceedings against the third parties.

 

10. Learned counsel for the State was at pains to persuade us that since the High Court is taking a broader view of the matter and wants to inquire into certain aspects, it was open to the High Court to do so.

 

11. We do not agree with this submission at all.

 

12. Such a plea, if accepted, is fraught with the danger of allowing Sessions Court/High Court to transcend beyond the scope of application under Section 438 Cr.P.C. and the matters relevant to be decided by the Court.

 

13. We hold that it is not open to the High Court in exercise of powers under Section 438 Cr.P.C. to add third parties to the proceedings, as if it is invoking powers under Order 1 Rule 10 of Code of Civil Procedure much less those parties who are neither necessary nor proper parties to the application under consideration.

 

14. Accordingly, we set aside the impugned judgment and order. However, we clarify that we are not expressing any opinion either way on the correctness of the observations made by the High Court in the impugned judgment and order with regard to matters unrelated to the applicant before the High Court. The State is free to take recourse to such remedy as may be permissible in law in regard to stated matters.

 

15. The appeals are disposed of in the above terms.

 

16. Pending applications, if any, stand disposed of.

 

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