Monish Kumar @ Abhishek vs State Govt. Of Nct Of Delhi on 2 July, 2025

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Delhi High Court – Orders

Monish Kumar @ Abhishek vs State Govt. Of Nct Of Delhi on 2 July, 2025

Author: Sanjeev Narula

Bench: Sanjeev Narula

                          $~5
                          *          IN THE HIGH COURT OF DELHI AT NEW DELHI
                          +          BAIL APPLN. 958/2025
                                     MONISH KUMAR @ ABHISHEK                                                               .....Petitioner
                                                                  Through:            Mr. Pankaj Kapoor, Mr. Nikhil Bahri,
                                                                                      Mr. Aniket Arora and Mr. Sagar,
                                                                                      Advocates.
                                                                  versus

                                     STATE GOVT. OF NCT OF DELHI                    .....Respondent
                                                   Through: Mr. Mukesh Kumar, APP for the
                                                              State.
                                                              Insp. Neeraj Kumar, PS: Ambedkar
                                                              Nagar.
                                                              Ms. Inderjeet Sidhu, Advocate for
                                                              Prosecutrix along with Prosecutrix in
                                                              person.
                                     CORAM:
                                     HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE SANJEEV NARULA
                                                   ORDER

% 02.07.2025

1. The present application under Section 483 read with Section 528 of
the Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita, 20231 (erstwhile Section 439 and
482 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 19732) seeks regular bail in
proceedings arising from FIR No. 595/2024 registered under Sections 64(1)
and 351(3) of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita 20233 at P.S. Ambedkar Nagar.

2. Briefly the Prosecution’s case is as follows:

2.1 On 28th November, 2024, W/SI Manita, received a PCR call from a
woman who stated that “ek ladke ke sath mere 3 saal purane rishte the usne

1
“BNSS”

2

Cr.P.C.”

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kisi aur se shadi kar li hai” (I had a three-year-old relationship with a man
who has now married someone else). The said PCR call was logged as DD
No. 111A. Subsequently, on 29th November, 2024, the Prosecutrix (‘S’)
lodged a detailed written complaint alleging harassment, threats, and sexual
exploitation by the Applicant. She disclosed that she began conversing with
the Applicant from 27th March, 2022, primarily via phone calls. Soon
thereafter, the Applicant started following her, compelling her to visit his
residence under threats of visiting her home himself or revealing their
relationship to others. When she resisted, he would arrive uninvited at her
home, exacerbating her distress.

2.2. In September, 2022, the Applicant took the Prosecutrix to the Sheetla
Mata Mandir in Gurugram and applied sindoor on her forehead declaring
that he loved her and that she was now his wife, assuring her that there was
no need to worry further. Leveraging this purported marital bond, the
Applicant engaged in physical relations with her over the next two years,
during which he also threatened her husband. Despite claiming such marital
status, the Applicant solemnized marriage with another woman on 28 th
November, 2024. The Prosecutrix specifically alleged that the latest incident
of sexual assault occurred on 18th November, 2024. Based on these
allegations, the present FIR was registered.

2.3. During course of investigation the Prosecutrix (‘S’) underwent a
medical examination at AIIMS Hospital (MLC No. 7801/2024). However,
she refused internal medical examination, and the Urine Pregnancy Test
(UPT) returned negative.

2.4. On 30th November, 2024, the Applicant was arrested in the present

3
“BNS”

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FIR and his potency test was conducted at AIIMS Hospital vide MLC No.
7797/2024.

2.5 During the course of investigation the statement of the Prosecutrix
was recorded under Section 183 of BNSS (corresponding to Section 164
Cr.P.C.). Her statement substantially corroborated the allegations detailed in
her initial complaint and FIR. Additionally, she submitted pictorial evidence
of threats communicated to her via WhatsApp calls by the Applicant, which
the investigating authorities duly seized.

2.6. After completion of investigation, the chargesheet has been submitted
before Trial Court, and the trial proceedings are at the stage of arguments on
charge.

3. Counsel for Applicant urges the following grounds for seeking bail:

3.1. The Applicant has been falsely implicated in the present case, with the
allegations of sexual assault being entirely concocted and devoid of factual
basis.

3.2. It is undisputed that when interactions between the Prosecutrix and
the Applicant commenced in March 2022, she had already been married to
one Mr. ‘N’ since 2012, and also had a child from the said marriage. The
Prosecutrix voluntarily maintained a consensual relationship with the
Applicant for nearly three years thereafter, fully cognizant of her existing
marital status. In these circumstances, the Prosecutrix’s assertion of a false
promise of marriage as the basis of the sexual relationship is both legally
unsustainable and factually improbable, given the subsistence of her
marriage throughout the relevant period.

3.3. The timing of the FIR makes it evident that the same is motivated by
malice and vindictiveness rather than genuine grievance. Pertinently, the

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FIR was lodged immediately after the Applicant solemnised his marriage
with another woman on 28th November, 2024. This chronological proximity
strongly indicates that the criminal process has been weaponised as a tool
for personal retaliation, amounting to a manifest abuse of law.
3.4. Furthermore, there are material inconsistencies and progressive
embellishments in the Prosecutrix’s narratives across her original complaint,
the FIR, and her subsequent statement recorded before the Magistrate under
Section 183 of the BNSS. Such marked contradictions cast significant doubt
on her credibility and create compelling suspicion regarding the authenticity
of her claims.

3.5. Previously, the Prosecutrix had also lodged a complaint against the
Applicant in 2022, which was subsequently withdrawn upon reaching a
settlement. The Applicant and his family reportedly compensated her
monetarily and with valuable articles, following which a written agreement
explicitly stipulated that both parties would permanently cease contact.
Despite this mutual understanding, it was the Prosecutrix herself who sought
to resume the relationship, thereby undermining her current allegations and
exposing her inconsistent stance.

3.6. The Applicant is a law-abiding citizen and has no prior criminal
antecedents. He has been in custody since his arrest on 30 th November, 2024
and has spent over 6 months in custody. The chargesheet stands filed and
therefore, no useful purpose would be served by keeping Applicant in
custody.

4. On the other hand, Mr. Mukesh Kumar, APP for the State and Ms.
Inderjeet Sidhu, counsel representing the Prosecutrix, oppose the present
bail application. They characterise this case as one involving prolonged

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emotional manipulation and exploitation of a vulnerable woman. Despite her
marital status, they argue that the Prosecutrix was systematically influenced,
coerced, and intimidated by the Applicant, rendering her apparent consent
invalid. They emphasise that the Applicant’s physical relationship with the
Prosecutrix was not a product of genuine consent but rather the result of
persistent coercion, explicit threats, and deception through a fraudulent
pretence of marriage.

5. Mr. Kumar, APP for the State further submits that the offence
committed by the Applicant is of a grave and heinous in nature and the
record reveals that he has been engaging in such behaviour on the false
pretence of marriage since 2022. He further submits that the Applicant has
also been extending threats to the Prosecutrix and her family members and
in case he is released on bail, he may continue to threaten them or other
witnesses and dissuade them from testifying against him. Moreover, he
urges that the trial is at a nascent stage at this time and is listed for
arguments on charge, thus, if the Applicant is granted bail, there is a
possibility that he may abscond and evade the trial proceedings.

6. The Court has considered the aforenoted contentions of the parties. It
is a well settled principle of law that while considering a bail application, the
Court must take several factors into consideration, such as whether any
prima facie reasonable ground is made out to believe that the accused has
committed the offence, the nature and gravity of the accusation, severity of
the potential punishment, risk of the accused fleeing or obstructing justice,
etc.4 However, at this juncture, the Court must avoid venturing into a
detailed or exhaustive evaluation of evidence, lest the bail proceedings

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acquire the character of a mini-trial.5 At this stage, the task before this Court
is limited only to forming a prima facie view of the evidentiary material
available on record.

7. Undoubtedly, the allegations against the Applicant are grave,
involving interpersonal relationships and consent. However, at this stage, it
is neither permissible nor appropriate for this Court to conclusively
determine whether the alleged relationship between the Applicant and the
Prosecutrix was consensual or coercive in nature. These questions inherently
require examination of evidence and the circumstances surrounding the
interactions between the parties. These issues that must be adjudicated
during trial. Any premature observation or conclusive finding by this Court
on these sensitive questions have the potential of causing prejudice to either
parties.

8. Nevertheless, a bare perusal of the FIR reveals that parties were in a
relationship since 2022. The Prosecutrix herself explicitly acknowledges that
at the time of her relationship with the Applicant, she was married to one
Mr. ‘N’ and has a child from the marriage. It is also not in dispute that the
said marriage has not been dissolved and is still subsisting. Thus, in the
prima facie opinion of this Court, there seems to be merit in the contention
of the Applicant that the allegation with respect to false pretence of marriage
is somewhat unconvincing. A promise of marriage, as ordinarily understood
in legal parlance, would logically lose persuasive force if extended to
someone already bound by a subsisting marriage. However, as noted above,
the crucial question as to whether the physical relationship between the

4
Prasanta Kumar Sarkar v. Ashis Chatterjee & Anr., (2010) 14 SCC 496.

5

See: Brijmani Devi v. Pappu Kumar& Anr., (2022) 4 SCC 497 and Mahipal v. Rajesh Kumar @ Polia,

BAIL APPLN. 958/2025 Page 6 of 9

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Prosecutrix and Applicant was consensual or not, would have to be
determined during the course of trial, after the parties lead their respective
evidence.

9. Further, the Applicant has also placed material on record showing that
the Prosecutrix previously filed a similar complaint against him in 2022,
which she subsequently withdrew after a settlement. Following this
agreement, both parties mutually decided to discontinue contact. Yet, the
Prosecutrix later herself continued the relationship, as is evident from the
WhatsApp communications placed on record. This resumption of contact, at
least prima facie, lends credibility to the case of the Applicant at this
preliminary stage.

10. It is noted that investigation in the matter is complete and a
chargesheet stands filed. As per the nominal roll, the Applicant has been in
custody for the past 7 months. Furthermore, he has clean antecedents and
has not been involved in any previous criminal case. The Supreme Court has
consistently held that pre-trial detention is not to be used as a substitute for
punishment; that primary aim sought to be achieved by bail is to secure the
attendance of the accused person at the trial6. Thus, with the investigation
being completed and the chargesheet filed, in the opinion of the Court the
continued incarceration of the Applicant will not serve any meaningful
purpose. As regards the submission of the State pertaining to the alleged
threats levelled by the Applicant against the Prosecutrix and her family, this
Court is inclined to impose suitable conditions on him to ensure that the
safety and security of the Prosecutrix and her family members is not

2020 (2) SCC 118.

6

See also: Sanjay Chandra v. CBI, (2012) 1 SCC 40; Satender Kumar Antil v. Central Bureau of

BAIL APPLN. 958/2025 Page 7 of 9

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compromised due to the Applicant being released on bail.

11. While the Court remains sensitive to the serious nature of the
allegations raised, it must also bear in mind the equally fundamental
principle that prolonged pre-trial incarceration should not become a
substitute for punishment itself. Personal liberty remains a core
constitutional right and must be cautiously balanced against apprehensions
voiced by the prosecution. In this context, it is pertinent that no specific
material has been shown to indicate that the Applicant poses a genuine risk
of absconding or tampering with evidence. Moreover, the imposition of
appropriate protective conditions, such as prohibiting contact with the
Prosecutrix or her family, restricting movements, periodic reporting at the
concerned police station, can effectively neutralise any perceived threats or
apprehensions. The bail must not be withheld merely on conjecture or
speculative fear of interference with the trial.

12. Consequently, given the totality of circumstances, the Court is
inclined to grant bail under strict conditions. Thus, the present application is
allowed and the Applicant is directed to be released on bail on furnishing a
personal bond for a sum of ₹25,000/- with one surety of the like amount,
subject to the satisfaction of the Trial Court/Duty Metropolitan Magistrate,
on the following conditions:

a. The Applicant shall cooperate in any further investigation as and
when directed by the concerned Investigating Officer;
b. The Applicant shall not contact the Prosecutrix or any of her family
members under any circumstances and shall not reside within a 3 km radius
of the vicinity where the Prosecutrix and her family reside. The Applicant

Investigation, (2022) 10 SCC 51.

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shall provide the address where he would be residing after his release and
shall not change the address without informing the concerned IO/ SHO;
c. The Applicant shall not, under any circumstance, directly or indirectly
make any inducement, threat or promise to any person acquainted with the
facts of the case or tamper with the evidence of the case, in any manner
whatsoever;

d. The Applicant shall under no circumstance leave the country without
the permission of the Trial Court;

e. The Applicant shall appear before the Trial Court as and when
directed;

f. The Applicant shall, upon his release, give his mobile number to the
concerned IO/SHO and shall keep his mobile phone switched on at all times.
g. The Applicant shall report to the concerned PS on first Friday of
every month to mark his appearance;

13. In the event of there being any FIR/DD entry/complaint lodged
against the Applicant, it would be open to the State to seek redressal by
filing an application seeking cancellation of bail.

14. It is clarified that any observations made in the present order are for
the purpose of deciding the present bail application and shall not influence
the outcome of the trial and should also not be taken as an expression of
opinion on the merits of the case.

15. The bail application is allowed in the afore-mentioned terms.

SANJEEV NARULA, J
JULY 2, 2025
d.negi

BAIL APPLN. 958/2025 Page 9 of 9

This is a digitally signed order.

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