We may remind the High Court of what this Court observed
in the case of Srikant Upadhyay & Ors. v. State of Bihar &
Anr., reported in 2024 INSC 202. We quote the relevant
observations as under:
“… A bare perusal of Section 438(1), Cr.PC, would
reveal that taking into consideration the factors
enumerated thereunder the Court may either reject
the application forthwith or issue an interim order
for the grant of anticipatory bail. The proviso
thereunder would reveal that if the High Court or,
the Court of Sessions, as the case may be, did not
pass an interim order under this Section or has
rejected the application for grant of anticipatory
bail, it shall be open to an officer in-charge of a
police station to arrest the person concerned
without warrant, on the basis of the accusation
apprehended in such application. In view of the
proviso under Section 438(1), Cr.PC, it cannot be
contended that if, at the stage of taking up the
matter for consideration, the Court is not rejecting
the application, it is bound to pass an interim
order for the grant of anticipatory bail. In short,
nothing prevents the court from adjourning such an
application without passing an interim order. This
question was considered in detail by a Single Bench
of the High Court of Bombay, in the decision in
Shrenik Jayantilal Jain and Anr. v. State of
Maharashtra through EOW Unit II, Mumbai 2014 SCC
Online Bom 549 and answered as above and we are in
agreement with the view that in such cases, there
will be no statutory inhibition for arrest. Hence,
the appellants cannot be heard to contend that the
application for anticipatory bail filed in November,
2022 could not have been adjourned without passing
interim order.…
We have already held that the power to grant
anticipatory bail is an extraordinary power. Though
in many cases it was held that bail is said to be a
rule, it cannot, by any stretch of imagination, be
said that anticipatory bail is the rule. It cannot
be the rule and the question of its grant should be
left to the cautious and judicious discretion by the
Court depending on the facts and circumstances of
each case. While called upon to exercise the said
power, the Court concerned has to be very cautious
as the grant of interim protection or protection to
the accused in serious cases may lead to miscarriage
of justice and may hamper the investigation to a
great extent as it may sometimes lead to tampering
or distraction of the evidence. We shall not be
understood to have held that the Court shall not
pass an interim protection pending consideration of
such application as the Section is destined to
safeguard the freedom of an individual against
unwarranted arrest and we say that such orders shall
be passed in eminently fit cases. At any rate, when
warrant of arrest or proclamation is issued, the
applicant is not entitled to invoke the
extraordinary power. Certainly, this will not
deprive the power of the Court to grant pre-arrest
bail in extreme, exceptional cases in the interest
of justice. …”{Para 16}
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CRIMINAL APPEAL No.5456 OF 2024
DEEPAK AGGARWAL Vs BALWAN SINGH & ANR.
Dated: 18th December, 2024.
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