Transit Anticipatory Bail Granted For Ten Days to Seek Regular Relief in GST Evasion Case
Issue
Whether the petitioners are entitled to limited transit anticipatory bail under Section 438 of the Code of Criminal Procedure (or corresponding statutory provisions) to protect them from arrest while traveling to approach the jurisdictional forum in Chennai, following large-scale gold and silver jewelry tax evasion proceedings initiated by the Directorate General of GST Intelligence (DGGI).
Facts
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The Directorate General of GST Intelligence (DGGI) registered proceedings (No. DGGI/INT/INTL/335/2026) against the petitioners for alleged offenses under Section 132(1)(a) read with Section 132(1)(i) of the CGST Act.
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The case involved allegations of large-scale tax evasion by a company engaged in buying old or used gold and silver jewelry across South India.
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The revenue authorities conducted multiple raids at various locations, including Bengaluru, and seized relevant documents.
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Apprehending arrest by the DGGI before they could approach the competent jurisdictional court in Chennai for regular anticipatory bail, the petitioners sought transit anticipatory bail.
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The respondents opposed the petition, asserting that the petitioners posed a flight risk, and requested strict conditions if any interim protection was granted.
Decision
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Held, that relying on the Supreme Court precedent in Priya Indoria v. State of Karnataka, limited transit protection can be granted to subserve the ends of justice without expressing any opinion on the core merits of the case.
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Held, that the petitioners are granted interim transit anticipatory bail for a limited period of ten days from the receipt of the order to facilitate their application before the jurisdictional forum in Chennai.
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Held, that in the event of an arrest during this ten-day window, the petitioners shall be released subject to executing a personal bond of Rs. 1 lakh each with two sureties to the satisfaction of the respondents.
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Held, that the petitioners must actively cooperate with the ongoing DGGI investigation and surrender their passports, subject to further orders from the Chennai forum. [Decided in favour of the assessee]
Key Takeaways
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Purpose of Transit Bail: Transit anticipatory bail serves as a temporary shield, protecting a citizen from immediate arrest by enforcement agencies while they travel to seek regular bail from the court that holds geographic jurisdiction over the offense.
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Precedent Guided Discretion: The principles laid down in Priya Indoria allow high courts to grant extraterritorial interim protection, balancing the personal liberty of the accused against the investigative powers of the state.
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Conditional Interim Liberty: Granting transit bail does not absolve the taxpayer from scrutiny; courts will routinely secure the revenue’s interests by mandating financial bonds, travel restrictions (like passport surrender), and strict cooperation clauses.
| 1. | The petitioners shall execute a personal bond for a sum of 1,00,000/- with two sureties to the likesum to the satisfaction of the respondents; |
| 2. | The petitioners shall co-operate with the respondents for the purpose of investigation. |
| 3. | The petitioners shall surrender their passports to the respondents which would be subject to the orders that may be passed by the jurisdictional Court at Chennai in the petition which would be filed by the petitioners seeking anticipatory bail. |

