Tuesday, November 5, 2024

Fairness and Bail

In July 2022, the Supreme Court delivered what proved to be the the last significant milestone on the law of bail — its judgment in Satender Kumar Antil v. CBI [(2022) 10 SCC 51]. At the time, I had noted that the judgment was quite a mixed bag. On some issues, such as arresting persons and denying bail after completing the investigation, it unequivocally expressed a preference for personal liberty. On others, such as actually laying down clearer guidelines for exercising bail discretion, it did not do much. And it left the subject with a plea to Parliament — forlorn, as it turned out — to think of coming up with a dedicated law on the matter of bail as is prevalent in some other countries (the UK example was cited).

Two years hence, the situation has only gotten worse. It may seem paradoxical to be writing this at a time when the Supreme Court and High Courts are invoking Article 21 to grant bail in cases where trials have been delayed and accused persons have spent years behind bars. That, however, is precisely the point: My wrongful confinement does not magically become concerning after two years, eleven months, and nine days. It was either always concerning, or it is never concerning but simply uncomfortable

Once we begin to see this, it is clear that granting bail is not some liberty affirming, constitutionally driven, judicial choice in such instances that we ought to be celebrating. It is a morally (and politically) convenient, and legally hollow, choice, which is perpetuating a jurisprudence of apology driven by the personal beliefs of judges with the text of the law merely a proxy, and not a choice for liberty inspired by a set of rules and political ideals that represent shared beliefs.

But this is really the tip of the proverbial iceberg. The consternation, or celebration, around the outcomes in bail cases takes all the attention and successfully masks the real scandal of procedural unfairness in the bail adjudication setting. What are the hallmarks of fairness, in a processual setting? There is no textbook definition, but it is easy to agree on some basics: (i) fair notice, in that I should know the case I have to answer (ii) an opportunity to be heard to give said answer, and (iii) a guarantee that my case will be dealt with by the same yardsticks as every other case. If even one is absent from the procedural setting, I would argue that such a setting cannot, under any stretch, constitute a fair setting especially when what is at stake is personal liberty.

And yet, we continue to adjudicate bail cases in a manner that almost prides itself in not confirming to the most basic notions of fairness. A person being arrested will almost never be furnished a copy of the First Information Report, or detailed grounds of arrest, or even a copy of the application seeking custody at the time of the hearing. Even when a bail application is somehow filed in spite of not having access to any of these documents, prosecutors and police personnel will either not file any response and rely exclusively on the secret contents of their dossiers and diaries, or object to sharing copies of any responses being filed with the accused. 

With such woeful anchoring on the aspect of notice, being granted with an opportunity of being heard is a mirage for most persons being detained. Almost always the first hearing is a washout since the lawyer has no idea of the case, and getting a hold of the documents will take a few days. At this point, the degree of protection that the law offers to your personal liberty becomes directly proportional to the money that you are willing to pay to lawyers who can secure that liberty. It is settled transformation which, sadly, leaves the vast majority behind. 

Which then brings us to the worst placed facet of the lot - adjudication itself on issues of bail and remand. There are, again, two parts to this. Firstly, there is the content of decision-making, which takes us back to the outcome. In not having guidelines on how courts ought to exercise their discretion on bail and custody, the result is that courts are free to conduct almost any kind of reasoning so long as it fits the remarkably featherlight and self-justificatory standard of exercising judicial discretion 'judiciously'. Secondly, there is the process of decision-making — how many hearings, what all has to be seen / looked at, who all have to be heard, what all must be recorded in the order, etc? 

Somehow, there is even greater flux on this aspect. A bail application may be decided now, or may be listed four months later, and may not be heard on that day citing some administrative difficulty and then be taken up two weeks later. Or a judge may simply conduct a remand hearing at his house in the morning after counsel having ten minutes notice. A court may agree to look at the documents filed by an accused, or may not, or may look at material filed by the prosecution without showing anything to the accused. A victim may be heard, or may not unless the statute prescribes otherwise, or may only be allowed to file written objections. A judge may pass a two paragraph order, or a two page order, but may not share it with the accused until after a few days due to logistical difficulties. Where the judge grants bail there may be conditions, or may not, or the same kind of cases may have different conditions, or different accused in the same case may have different conditions without any explanation. Literally, anything goes.

When we think about the need for a bail law, the conversation naturally glides towards the debates on the matter of outcomes since that is what grabs most public attention. The real need for having such a law is arguably elsewhere, in making the process of bail adjudication fairer for all parties involved. It would be a huge step in stemming the growth of this jurisprudence of apology, and reinforcing a rules-based ordering of personal liberty, victim's rights, and investigative prerogatives of the state. 

Considering that undertrial prisoner population today stands at a jaw-dropping national average of more than 75% of total prison population, there is no other legal reform requiring more attention. It needs work, yes, and it will not brook an easy solution such as simply releasing first-time offenders early. Whichever parliament, or Court for that matter, commits itself to the task, ensures that India's criminal justice system takes a step back from the abyss into which it has been staring for some time now. 

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