Bhushan Steel Owner Singhal Denied Bail
·
No
Grounds for Arrest need be Served in Pre Pankaj Bansal
Case
·
Neeraj
Singhal, promoter and former managing director of Bhushan Steel Ltd, followed
by a search operation at his residence in connection with its probe in a bank
fraud case of Rs 56,000 crore.
·
In
Pankaj Bansal = 2023-TIOLCORP-06-SC-PMLA
-October 3, 2023), it was held that the grounds of arrest shall be furnished to
the accused / arrested person without exception. Further, the Supreme Court
observed that informing the arrested person of the grounds of arrest in writing
would be necessary ' henceforth'.
The
Enforcement Directorate arrested Neeraj Singhal, promoter and former managing
director of Bhushan Steel Ltd, followed by a search operation at his residence
in connection with its probe in a bank fraud case of Rs 56,000 crore. Singhal was
remanded in ED custody by a special court here till June 20.
The
Delhi High Court on 8th January 2024 dismissed his bail petition in an
interesting order. - 2024-TIOLCORP-03-HC-DEL-PMLA
The
brief story:
1. Directorate of Enforcement (ED) registered
the case under the provisions of Prevention of Money Laundering Act, 2002
(PMLA) alleging that the petitioner is involved in one of the biggest banking
frauds coupled with the offence of money laundering. It is alleged that the
petitioner has caused loss to the public to the tune of more than Rs. 46,000
Crores.
2.
The petitioner received summons dated 03.06.2023 from the ED directing him to
appear on 09.06.2023. On 09.06.2023, the petitioner failed to attend due to his
alleged illness and requested his appearance to be postponed to some other date
or that he may be allowed to appear through video conferencing. The petitioner
on the said date also sent his authorized representative to appear before the
ED.
3.
It is the case of the petitioner that on the same day, at about 04:50 pm the
Enforcement Directorate officials entered and searched his residential premises
and thereafter, the petitioner was arrested by ED at 10:25 pm.
4.
The petitioner was produced before the Special Judge, Rouse Avenue Court on
10.06.2023, when the Judge granted remand for 10 days which was further
extended vide order dated 20.06.2023.
The
controversy raised in the present cases revolves around the non-compliance of
the mandate of Section 19 of the PMLA. During pendency of the petition, the law
on the interpretation of Section 19(1) of the PMLA has evolved through various
judicial pronouncements of the Supreme Court.
Section
19(1) reads as:
19.
Power of Arrest: (1) If the Director, Deputy Director, Assistant Director or
any other officer authorised in this behalf by the Central Government by
general or special order, has on the basis of material in his possession,
reason to believe (the reason for such belief to be recorded in writing) that
any person has been guilty of an offence punishable under this Act, he may
arrest such person and shall, as soon as maybe, inform him of the grounds for
such arrest.
In
V. Senthil Balaji vs. State = 2023-TIOLCORP-04-SC-PMLA - August 07, 2023), the
Supreme Court held that an authorized officer under the PMLA Act, 2002 is not
duty bound to follow the rigours of Section 41A of the CrPC, inasmuch as, there
is already an exhaustive procedure contemplated under the PMLA containing
sufficient safeguards in favour of the person arrested. It was further held
that the arrest is bound to be followed by an information being 'served' on the
arrestee of the grounds of arrest and any non-compliance of the mandate of
Section 19(1) of the PMLA, 2002 would vitiate the very arrest itself.
In
Pankaj Bansal = 2023-TIOLCORP-06-SC-PMLA
-October 3, 2023), it was held that the grounds of arrest shall be furnished to
the accused / arrested person without exception. Further, the Supreme Court
observed that informing the arrested person of the grounds of arrest in writing
would be necessary ' henceforth'.
It
was argued on behalf of the ED that the decision in Pankaj Bansal is prospective
in its application because the Supreme Court has expressly held that the
obligation of furnishing the grounds of arrest shall become effective
'henceforth'. On the contrary, it was argued on behalf of the petitioner that
the Supreme Court has only clarified the position of the existing law, that is,
Section 19 of the PMLA and has not formulated any new law, therefore, the said
judgment is retrospective in its application.
The
question whether the directions passed in Pankaj Bansal will apply prospectively
or not, came up for consideration before the Supreme Court in Ram Kishor Arora
vs. Directorate of Enforcement = 2023-TIOLCORP-10-SC-PMLA DECEMBER 15th, 2023).
The Court held that the use of expression 'henceforth' in Pankaj Bansal implied
that the requirement of furnishing grounds of arrest in writing to the arrested
person as soon as after his arrest was not mandatory or obligatory till the
date of pronouncement of the said judgment and accordingly, non-furnishing of
grounds of arrest in writing till the said date could neither be held to be
illegal nor the action of the concerned officer in not furnishing the same in
writing could be faulted with.
Elaborating
further, the Court observed that it would be sufficient compliance of not only
Section 19 of PMLA but also of Article 22(1) of the Constitution of India, if
the person arrested is informed or made aware about the grounds of arrest at
the time of his arrest and is furnished a written communication about the
grounds of arrest as soon as may be i.e. 'as early as possible without
avoidable delay' and within 'reasonably convenient' and 'reasonably requisite'
period of time, which would be twenty-four hours of the arrest.
It
is the case of the petitioner that he was not furnished/supplied a copy of the
grounds of arrest in writing at the time of his arrest.
The
High Court observed,
As
laid down by the Supreme Court in Ram Kishor Arora, the requirement of
furnishing grounds of arrest to the accused/arrested person in writing was not
mandatory or obligatory till the date of directions passed in Pankaj Bansal on
3rd October, 2023, therefore, non-furnishing of grounds of arrest to the
petitioner in writing, who was arrested on 09.06.2023, could not be held
illegal.
Now
reverting to the factual conundrum which still looms large in the present case
was whether the petitioner was orally communicated, or in other words, shown,
the grounds of arrest at the time of his arrest.
The
High Court observed,
Clearly,
the document 'ground of arrest' bears the signatures of the petitioner at two
points. One, immediately after the conclusion of narration of grounds of
arrest. Secondly, below the endorsement made in terms of the judgment of the
Supreme Court in D.K. Basu to the effect that the
petitioner has been intimated about his rights as an arrestee and his wife has
been informed about his arrest "physically" at "22.28" on
09.06.2023.
Therefore,
merely because each page of the 'ground of arrest' is not signed by the
petitioner cannot be a reason to disbelieve the existence of the said document,
or to negate the fact that the grounds of arrest were shown and informed to the
petitioner.
The
panchnama which was prepared contemporaneously also
records that the Arresting Officer had presented the 'Arrest Memo' to the
petitioner and informed him the grounds of arrest and that the petitioner
signed the Arrest Memo as token of him being informed the grounds of his
arrest. The panchnama is also signed by the wife of
the petitioner. It is not in dispute that a copy of the panchnama
was supplied by the respondent to the petitioner / his wife and the same has
also been annexed with the petition. Just because the panchnama
does not specifically mention that the petitioner signed the 'ground of arrest'
as a token of acknowledgement of having been informed the grounds of his
arrest, cannot be reason to discard what is recorded in the panchnama
when the same has not been disputed at any stage.
The
contention of the petitioner that the 'Arrest Order' dated 09.06.2023 records
that the petitioner was arrested at Parvartan Bhawan
shows that the said document was not in existence at the time, the search was
carried out at the residence of the petitioner, does not hold water. A perusal
of the 'Arrest Order' shows that the petitioner apart from affixing his
signature has also appended the date "9/6/23", and the time
"22:28" at which his wife was informed about his arrest, in his own
handwriting, therefore, the said document cannot be said to be ante-dated or
ante-timed. Insofar as the place of arrest is concerned, it is evident from the
'Arrest Memo' that the place of arrest of the petitioner is shown as his
residence viz., W-29, Greater Kailash-II, New Delhi and this document was
available with the petitioner from the date of arrest itself but there is no
whisper either in the petition or in the bail application that place of arrest
is wrongly recorded nor any such objection seems to have been taken before the
learned Special Judge. The search panchnama also
reveals that the arrest was affected at the residence of the petitioner in the
presence of two independent witnesses. The wife of the petitioner has also
signed the panchnama. Merely because there is some
typographical error in the 'Arrest Order' with regard to the place of arrest,
the same will not ensure to the benefit of the petitioner and vitiate his
arrest.
Furthermore,
the source of 'ground of arrest' and other contemporaneous documents viz.,
Arrest Memo, Panchnama and Arrest Order is official
i.e., the Enforcement Directorate, therefore, they would carry presumption of
correctness under Section 114(e) of the Evidence Act, 1872 that official acts
have been regularly performed.
In
light of the aforesaid discussion, it cannot be said that the arrest of the
petitioner is illegal. Under the circumstances, BAIL APPLN 2356/2023, deserve
to be dismissed and is accordingly dismissed.
The
Court made it clear that the merits of the case have not been considered as the
same were not urged either in the petition or in the bail application.