Ganpat vs State Of Rajasthan (2025:Rj-Jd:37966) on 22 August, 2025

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Rajasthan High Court – Jodhpur

Ganpat vs State Of Rajasthan (2025:Rj-Jd:37966) on 22 August, 2025

Author: Farjand Ali

Bench: Farjand Ali

[2025:RJ-JD:37966]

          HIGH COURT OF JUDICATURE FOR RAJASTHAN AT
                           JODHPUR
  S.B. Criminal Miscellaneous 2nd Bail Application No. 8435/2025

Ganpat S/o Shri Peera Ram, Aged About 37 Years, R/o
Bhirmarlai, Tehsil Pachpadra, Dist. Barmer (Lodged In Dist. Jail,
Sirohi)
                                                                         ----Petitioner
                                      Versus
State Of Rajasthan, Through Pp
                                                                    ----Respondent


For Petitioner(s)           :     Mr. S.K. Bhati
For Respondent(s)           :     Mr. S.S. Rathore, Dy.G.A.



                 HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE FARJAND ALI

Order

22/08/2025

1. The jurisdiction of this court has been invoked by way of

filing an application under Section 439 CrPC at the instance of

accused-petitioner. The requisite details of the matter are

tabulated herein below:

S.No.                           Particulars of the Case
     1.     FIR Number                                14/2025
     2.     Concerned Police Station                  Pindwara
     3.     District                                  Sirohi
     4.     Offences alleged in the FIR               Sections 8/15 & 29 of the
                                                      NDPS Act
     5.     Offences added, if any                    -
     6.     Date of passing of impugned 27.02.2025
            order


2. The concise facts of the case are that on 11.01.2025, the

Police Station In-charge, along with his team, was on duty when a

a KIA car being registration No.RJ39-CA-6860 was noticed

approaching at a high speed. Upon being signaled to stop by the

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police party, the said vehicle did not comply and instead

attempted to escape at high speed.

2.1. In response, the police force erected a barricade at the stand

and managed to surround the vehicle from all sides. The driver

was intercepted and, upon inquiry, disclosed his name as Ganpat

Lal. When questioned about his attempt to flee and his suspicious

conduct, Ganpat Lal stated that his friend, Bhanwarlal, was

following him in a Brezza car bearing registration number GJ18-

BP-5741, and that Bhanwarlal had instructed him to watch the

way of his vehicle. Meanwhile, the said Brezza car was also

observed approaching from the Udaipur side, being driven by

another individual which was thereafter, intercepted then and

there. Upon search of the Breeza Car, 96 Kg poppy husk in four

plastic bag was recovered from beneath the two rear seats as well

as the trunk of the vehicle. The petitioner was arrested on

11.01.2025 for his alleged role of facilitation of the crime. As a

matter of fact nothing incriminating was found in his possession.

2.2. After completing spot proceedings, a First Information Report

(FIR) No. 14/2025 was registered at Police Station Pindwara under

Sections 8/15 and 29 of the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic

Substances Act, 1985. His first bail application being SBCRLMB

No.3272/2025 was dismissed by this Court as not pressed by this

Court vide order dated 16.06.2025 with liberty to renew the

prayer after filing of the challan papers. Hence the instant bail

application.

3. It is contended on behalf of the accused-petitioner that no

case for the alleged offences is made out against him and his

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incarceration is not warranted. There are no factors at play in the

case at hand that may work against grant of bail to the accused-

petitioner and he has been made an accused based on conjectures

and surmises.

4. Contrary to the submissions of learned counsel for the

petitioner, learned Public Prosecutor opposes the bail application

and submits that the present case is not fit for enlargement of

accused on bail.

5. I have heard and considered the submissions made by both

the parties and perused the material available on record.

5.1. Upon a scrupulous evaluation of the record and the entire

concatenation of circumstances, it emerges with clarity that the

petitioner has been arraigned not on the strength of substantive

and admissible material, but rather upon the frail pedestal of

suspicion. Such suspicion, howsoever grave, remains insufficient

in law to fasten culpability. The solitary allegation of the petitioner

“escorting” another vehicle is tenuous at best, being an inferential

assumption bereft of corroboration or probative worth. In such

circumstances, the petitioner justly merits sympathetic

consideration and the equitable indulgence of this Court for

exercise of its discretion under Section 439 Cr.P.C. but of course

within limitation of Section 37 of the NDPS Act

5.2. The fulcrum of the prosecution case is the assertion that co-

accused Bhanwarlal was apprehended while allegedly transporting

96 kilograms of contraband poppy husk in his vehicle, and that the

petitioner was purportedly “escorting” the said vehicle. It is,

however, an admitted fact that no contraband or any incriminating

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material whatsoever was ever recovered from the personal

possession of the petitioner. His arrest thus stands predicated

exclusively on conjecture and assumption, without the scaffolding

of corroborative evidence to establish his complicity in the

transportation of narcotics.

5.3. It is a cardinal and entrenched principle of criminal

jurisprudence that suspicion, however strong or compelling,

cannot supplant the standard of legal proof demanded by law. In

the absence of any recovery or seizure from the petitioner, the

statutory presumptions envisaged under Sections 35 and 54 of the

NDPS Act, 1985, cannot be legitimately invoked against him. The

Hon’ble Supreme Court in Union of India v. Bal Mukund & Ors.

(2009) 12 SCC 161, and Mohd. Sahabuddin v. State of

Assam (2012) 13 SCC 491, has categorically enunciated that

where no contraband is recovered from an accused, mere

presence at or proximity to the scene cannot, in itself, constitute

proof of conscious possession or active involvement.

5.4. In the case at hand, apart from the bald assertion that the

petitioner was “escorting” the principal vehicle, the prosecution

has not adduced any supporting material of probative value.

Neither call detail records, nor surveillance inputs, nor the

testimony of independent witnesses, nor any admissible

documentary evidence has been placed on record to demonstrate

any prior meeting of minds, premeditated agreement, or

participation in the alleged transportation of narcotics. The

prosecution narrative, therefore, rests upon a fragile edifice of

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speculation, wholly incapable of sustaining the rigours of the NDPS

Act.

5.5. At this juncture, it assumes significance that the allegation

against the petitioner, insofar as the use of the car is concerned,

rests exclusively upon the circumstance that his vehicle happened

to be intercepted in temporal and spatial proximity to the Breeza

Car from which contraband was actually recovered. Such a

circumstance, standing in isolation, is legally inadequate to fasten

criminal liability upon the petitioner. National highways are public

thoroughfares traversed daily by an unremitting stream of

vehicles; the mere fact that two vehicles were moving sequentially

or intercepted at a location within close proximity of time cannot,

by any stretch of inference, be equated with proof of collusion or

the role of “escort.” Acceptance of such a proposition would

amount to criminalising ordinary vehicular movement, thereby

exposing innocent commuters to unwarranted penal

consequences. Criminal liability, by its very nature, must rest upon

proof of conscious possession, active participation, or

demonstrable nexus with the illicit act; conjecture or geographical

proximity does not suffice.

5.6. Furthermore, in the absence of clear, cogent, and admissible

evidence establishing a direct nexus between the petitioner’s KIA

car and the other vehicle i.e. Breeza Car involved in transporation

of contraband, the prosecution’s suggestion that the car was

serving as an escort vehicle remains wholly speculative and

cannot, in law, be treated as a proved fact. Consequently, no

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substantive link has been established between the occupants of

the intercepted car and the contraband seized from the other

vehicle.

5.7. It is equally pertinent that the driver of the vehicle laden with

contraband absconded from the spot, abandoning the vehicle,

whereas the petitioner, who happened to be present in the vicinity,

was apprehended on that singular ground. The jurisprudential

presumption of innocence cannot be displaced merely by his

coincidental presence. His mere presence, bereft of any

incriminating nexus, cannot be artificially equated with culpability

or conspiracy. The Coordinate Bench of this Court in Chanda Ram

v. State of Rajasthan (2014 CriLJ 1091) has categorically held

that mere presence near the place of recovery, without any

corroborative evidence, is grossly inadequate to invoke the

draconian rigours of the NDPS Act.

5.8. Besides the above, a plea was raised on behalf of the

petitioner that he is an indigent person, a weaker person of the

Society and looking to his precarious, economic and social

background, he be released on bail. To verify the above fact, this

Court had directed the learned Public Prosecutor to procure the

report from the Police Station concerned. Learned Public

Prosecutor has submitted a factual Report dated 19.08.2025 and

perusal of which is manifestly reflects that the petitioner is a

poor person, having no criminal antecedents. A further letter

dated 16.08.2025 issued by the Sarpanch, Gram Panchayat,

Bhimarlai, District Balotra indicates that the petitioner hails from a

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family of modest means, dependent exclusively upon agriculture

and animal husbandry for sustenance, and enjoys an unblemished

reputation in his community. His social and economic vulnerability

further militates against the hypothesis of his involvement in an

organised narcotics operation.

5.9. In these circumstances, the petitioner’s continued

incarceration is not only unwarranted but constitutes an

unjustified incursion upon his fundamental right to personal liberty

under Article 21 of the Constitution of India. The prosecution has

conspicuously failed to demonstrate any nexus between him and

the contraband, and his implication rests solely upon conjecture.

The rigours of Section 37 of the NDPS Act, which restrict the grant

of bail, cannot be applied mechanically where there exists a

manifest absence of recovery, antecedents, or credible material

suggestive of complicity.

6. Thus, in the absence of recovery, in the absence of criminal

antecedents, and in the conspicuous absence of corroborative

material, the allegation of “escorting” stands wholly

unsubstantiated. The prosecution case against the petitioner is

predicated exclusively on suspicion, which, in law, cannot justify

the deprivation of liberty under a penal statute of such draconian

severity. Thus, this Court is of the view that the petitioner is

entitled to the indulgence of bail.

7. Accordingly, the instant bail application under Section 439

Cr.P.C. is allowed and it is ordered that the accused-petitioner as

named in the cause title shall be enlarged on bail provided he

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furnishes a personal bond in the sum of Rs.50,000/- with two

sureties of Rs.25,000/- each to the satisfaction of the learned trial

Judge for his appearance before the court concerned on all the

dates of hearing as and when called upon to do so.

(FARJAND ALI),J
44-Mamta/-

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