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rajdeep kumar 1 year ago
rajdeep

On April 16, 2025, the Delhi High Court, in Gurpreet Singh @ Bawa @ Baba v. State Govt. of NCT of Delhi (BAIL APPLN. 3755/2024), granted regular bail to the petitioner under Section 483 of the Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita, 2023 (BNSS) in connection with FIR No. 14/2022, registered under Sections 406/467/468/471/420/170/120B of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) at the Special Cell, Delhi. The court, emphasizing the petitioner’s 23-month incarceration, the unlikelihood of a speedy trial with over 100 witnesses, and the completion of the investigation, held that continued detention would violate his right to liberty under Article 21 of the Constitution. Stringent bail conditions were imposed to address concerns about tampering or flight risk. This blog analyzes the case details, the court’s reasoning, and its implications for bail in economic offense cases.


Case Background

The case stemmed from a complaint by three partners—Brijmohan Goyal, Ashok Kumar Goyal, and Devender Kumar—who alleged they were defrauded of approximately Rs. 55 crores by the petitioner, Gurpreet Singh @ Bawa @ Baba, and co-accused Gurpreet Singh Anand @ Vinny, Amandeep @ Aman Anand, and Anil Kumar, posing as a DDA officer. The complainants, engaged in a business partnership, had bid for three DDA plots in 2018, succeeded, but backed out, forfeiting 5% of the bid amount. The petitioner, a neighbor of Ashok Kumar Goyal and a property dealer, allegedly approached them in 2018, claiming connections with DDA officials to recover the forfeited amount.

The accused proposed purchasing a DDA property at Lawrence Road (334.45 sq. meters), assuring that the forfeited amount would be adjusted. They showed the property on an online DDA portal, confirmed it in the complainants’ names, and demanded additional payments for documents like possession slips and conveyance deeds. The accused introduced Anil Kumar as a DDA officer and later provided forged documents for 25 additional DDA properties. Suspicious, the complainants filed a complaint, leading to the FIR in 2022. The investigation revealed forged documents, and the petitioner was arrested on May 1, 2023, after being declared a proclaimed offender under Section 82 CrPC. A chargesheet was filed on February 24, 2023, followed by a supplementary chargesheet on July 28, 2023, but charges were yet to be framed.


Key Arguments

Petitioner’s Submissions

Represented by Mr. Rajiv Mohan and others, the petitioner argued:

  1. Prolonged Incarceration: Incarcerated since May 1, 2023 (23 months), with no charges framed and over 100 witnesses listed, the trial’s conclusion was distant. Citing Manish Sisodia v. Directorate of Enforcement (2024), he argued that indefinite detention violated his Article 21 right to liberty.

  2. Documentary Evidence: The evidence being documentary (forged documents recovered from complainants), there was no risk of tampering or influencing witnesses.
  3. No Criminal Antecedents: As a first-time offender, he posed no flight risk.
  4. Weak Prosecution Case:
  • The timeline was inconsistent: the complaint claimed the petitioner approached them in 2018, but DDA’s email showed the auction occurred on January 22, 2019.
  • Of 67 demand drafts allegedly handed to the accused, 52 (worth Rs. 13,82,48,586) were credited to DDA’s account but not linked to specific properties or the petitioner.
  • A diary with cash transaction entries lacked clear descriptions or property links, and its admissibility under Section 34 of the Indian Evidence Act was questionable.
  • The “multi-victim” claim was misleading, as the 24 alleged victims were complainants’ relatives, casting doubt on the claims’ legitimacy.
  • Forged documents lacked the petitioner’s handwriting or signature, and per Sheila Sebastian v. R. Jawaharaj (2018), forgery charges require evidence of document creation, absent here.

State’s Submissions

Represented by Mr. Utkarsh, Additional Public Prosecutor, the State opposed bail, arguing:

  1. Multi-Victim Fraud: The case involved significant fraud (Rs. 55 crores), affecting multiple victims, warranting strict treatment.

  2. Flight Risk: The petitioner, previously declared a proclaimed offender under Section 82 CrPC, was arrested only after evading authorities, indicating a risk of fleeing if released.
  3. Tampering Risk: As a property dealer known to the complainants and allegedly misleading the investigation, the petitioner could tamper with evidence or influence witnesses.
  4. Gravity of Offenses: The charges (cheating, forgery, criminal breach of trust, impersonation, and conspiracy) carried severe penalties (up to 7–10 years or life imprisonment), justifying continued detention.

Court’s Analysis and Decision

Justice Vikas Mahajan granted regular bail, balancing the petitioner’s liberty with safeguards against prosecution concerns. Key findings included:

  1. Prolonged Incarceration and Trial Delay: The petitioner’s 23-month custody, with no charges framed and over 100 witnesses, indicated no imminent trial conclusion. Citing Manish Sisodia (2024), the court held that indefinite detention pending a delayed trial violated Article 21. Sanjay Chandra v. CBI (2012) was invoked to emphasize that bail relieves pre-conviction imprisonment when custody is no longer necessary post-investigation.

  2. Completed Investigation: With the chargesheet and supplementary chargesheet filed, the investigation was complete, and further custody was unnecessary, per Sanjay Chandra. The documentary nature of evidence (forged documents already recovered) minimized tampering risks.
  3. Merits Not Adjudicated: The court acknowledged the petitioner’s arguments on inconsistencies (e.g., 2018 vs. 2019 timeline, unlinked demand drafts, questionable diary, and lack of signature on forged documents) but refrained from commenting on their merits or evidence probative value, as charges were not framed. Such issues were left for the Trial Court to address, avoiding prejudice to either party.
  4. Flight and Tampering Risks Mitigated: The State’s concerns about the petitioner’s prior status as a proclaimed offender and potential tampering were addressed through stringent bail conditions, including regular reporting to the Investigating Officer and restrictions on contacting witnesses.
  5. Economic Offense Context: Citing Satender Kumar Antil v. State of Maharashtra (2022), the court rejected a strict approach to bail in economic offenses, emphasizing that pre-conviction detention should not be punitive. Ramkripal Meena v. Directorate of Enforcement (2024) supported relaxing rigors for prolonged custody and delayed trials.

The petitioner was granted bail on furnishing a personal bond of Rs. 1,00,000 with one surety, subject to conditions:

  • Reporting to the Investigating Officer every second Saturday (4:00–5:00 p.m.).

  • Appearing in court as required.
  • Maintaining an active mobile number with prior intimation of changes.
  • Not indulging in criminal activity or contacting complainants/witnesses.

The court clarified that its observations were limited to the bail application and not an opinion on the case’s merits.


Implications of the Judgment

This ruling has significant implications for bail in economic offense cases:

  1. Article 21 and Prolonged Detention: The court’s reliance on Manish Sisodia and Sanjay Chandra reinforces that prolonged pre-trial detention, especially with delayed trials, violates the right to liberty. This strengthens bail prospects in cases with voluminous evidence or numerous witnesses.

  2. Economic Offenses Not Punitive: Satender Kumar Antil’s deprecation of strict bail denials in economic offenses encourages courts to prioritize liberty over community sentiment or offense magnitude, provided investigation is complete.
  3. Stringent Conditions as Safeguards: Imposing rigorous conditions (e.g., regular reporting, no witness contact) addresses flight and tampering risks, enabling bail even for proclaimed offenders, balancing prosecution concerns with liberty.
  4. Deferral of Merits: By avoiding comment on evidence or offense ingredients, the court preserved Trial Court autonomy, ensuring fair adjudication at appropriate stages and preventing prejudice.
  5. Documentary Evidence and Tampering: The emphasis on documentary evidence reducing tampering risks supports bail in fraud cases where physical evidence is secured, encouraging courts to assess evidence nature in bail decisions.

Conclusion

The Delhi High Court’s decision in Gurpreet Singh @ Bawa @ Baba v. State Govt. of NCT of Delhi exemplifies a balanced approach to bail in economic offense cases, prioritizing the petitioner’s right to liberty under Article 21 while addressing prosecution concerns through stringent conditions. The court’s focus on 23-month incarceration, trial delays with over 100 witnesses, and completed investigation underscores the judiciary’s commitment to preventing pre-conviction detention from becoming punitive. By deferring merits to the Trial Court and leveraging precedents like Sanjay Chandra and Manish Sisodia, the ruling ensures procedural fairness.

For accused in economic offense cases, this decision highlights the importance of emphasizing custody duration and trial delays in bail applications, particularly when evidence is documentary. For prosecutors, it underscores the need for robust evidence linking accused to offenses to sustain detention arguments. As economic offense trials grow complex, this judgment contributes to a liberty-centric bail framework, tempered by safeguards to ensure trial integrity.

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