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Supreme Court sets aside stay on probe against India BullsThe apex court noted the High Court has also granted blanket orders restraining the arrest without the accused applying for the anticipatory bail.
Ashish Tripathi
Last Updated IST
<div class="paragraphs"><p>The Supreme Court of India.</p></div>

The Supreme Court of India.

Credit: DH Photo

New Delhi: The Supreme Court on Tuesday expressed its serious concern over the Allahabad High Court staying at nascent stage the probe launched against India Bulls Housing Finance Ltd and others and protecting its officers from arrest in utter disregard of law for alleged fraudulent misappropriation of properties worth hundreds of crores.

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A bench of Justices Bela M Trivedi and Prasanna B Varale said despite the legal position settled by this court in catena of decisions, the High Court has passed the orders staying the investigations of the FIRs and ECIR in question.

The court noted the High Court has also granted blanket orders restraining the arrest without the accused applying for the anticipatory bail under Section 438 of Criminal Procedure Code.

Acting on three petitions filed by the Enforcement Directorate, the bench said, "It hardly needs to be reiterated that the inherent powers under Section 482 of CrPC do not confer any arbitrary jurisdiction on the High Court to act according to whims or caprice." 

The HC by three separate orders passed between July 13, 2023 and September 13, 2023 provided interim relief to Neeraj Tyagi, Reena Bagga of IHFL and M3M India Pvt Ltd and others in FIRs initiated by Shipra Group for fraudulent sale of mortgaged properties. Another case was related to transfer of shares.

The Enforcement Directorate contended the High Court passed the orders without assigning any cogent reasons under the guise of following an order passed by this court on July 4, 2023 providing relief to the respondents, even though a review petition against the said order was pending.

Agreeing to the contention, the bench said, "This court had passed the said order leaving it open to the High Court to decide the writ petitions on their own merits".

The bench said it would not express its opinion on merits as writ petitions are pending before the High Court.

The court, however, said that higher courts should follow the law to ensure judicial discipline and not to use their extraordinary and inherent powers to act as per its whims and caprice.However, the bench stressed, "The statutory power has to be exercised sparingly with circumspection and in the rarest of rare cases." 

"Suffice it to say that judicial comity and judicial discipline demands that higher courts should follow the law. The extraordinary and inherent powers of the court do not confer any arbitrary jurisdiction," the bench said.

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(Published 14 February 2024, 01:02 IST)