Validity of Arrest and Procedural Safeguards under BNSS 2023
1. The Core Dispute: Technical Omissions vs. Substantive Awareness
The DGGI arrested two respondents for allegedly availing fraudulent Input Tax Credit (ITC) totaling approximately ₹16.53 crore (roughly ₹8.26 crore each). The Chief Judicial Magistrate (CJM) initially granted bail based on two procedural flaws:
The “Heading” Issue: The arrest/bail documents did not explicitly mention the new headings under Sections 47 and 48 of the BNSS, 2023 (which replaced Sections 50 and 50A of the CrPC).
The “Relative Notice” Issue: While relatives were informed of the arrest, the specific “Grounds of Arrest” were not detailed in the notice sent to them.
2. Legal Analysis: Grounds of Arrest under Sections 47 & 48 (BNSS)
The High Court and subsequently the Supreme Court (or High Court in appellate capacity) analyzed whether these omissions prejudiced the accused’s right to liberty.
I. “Grounds of Arrest” vs. “Intimation to Relatives”
The court clarified the distinct duties under the BNSS:
Section 47 (BNSS): Mandatory duty to inform the arrested person of the specific grounds for their arrest and their right to bail.
Section 48 (BNSS): Obligation to inform a relative or friend about the fact of the arrest and the place of detention.
II. Factual Compliance
The Court found that although the notice to relatives was brief, the Arrest Memos provided to the respondents themselves contained detailed annexures outlining the fraud allegations. The respondents had signed these memos, acknowledging that the grounds were explained to them.
Ruling: Since the accused were represented by counsel and were fully aware of the allegations, the lack of detailed grounds in the relative’s notice did not cause “legal prejudice.”
3. Final Ruling: Balanced Enforcement
The Court took a nuanced approach, distinguishing between the roles of the two respondents (Father and Son):
For the Son: Considering his personal circumstances and the nature of the allegations, the High Court’s reversal was set aside, and the CJM’s original bail order was restored.
For the Father: Given the gravity of the ₹8.27 crore fraud, the Court allowed limited custodial interrogation for specified consecutive days. He was directed to be released only after this period, subject to strict conditions imposed by the Trial Court.
Key Takeaways for Taxpayers and Practitioners
Transition to BNSS: Ensure all legal filings and arrest memos now reflect the correct BNSS sections (2023) instead of CrPC (1973).
Grounds Must Be Clear: While technical errors in notice headings may be condoned if the “substance” is met, the Department must ensure the Arrest Memo itself is exhaustive and signed by the arrestee.
Bail is Not Automatic: In GST fraud exceeding ₹5 crore (cognizable/non-bailable), the courts will weigh the “enormity of the allegations” against procedural lapses. Purely technical errors may not be enough to secure bail if the evidence of fraud is substantial.