SHIVALA BHIKHAMSAR vs BABLIR KUMAR JATTI . — C.A. No. 6125/2001

Case under Section IV. Status: Disposed.

Disposed

CNR: SCIN010000622000

Filing Date

03-Jan-2000

Registration No

C.A. No. 6125/2001

Diary Number

62/2000

Order Date

08-May-2017

Document Type

Judgment - of Main Case

Neutral Citation

2017 INSC 454

Disposal Type

Dismissed

Last updated 29-May-2026

Acts & Sections

Section IV

Petitioner(s)

  1. 1.SHIVALA BHIKHAMSAR

    Adv. S. N. BHAT (Dead / Retired / Elevated)

Respondent(s)

  1. 1.BABLIR KUMAR JATTI .

    Adv. MANOJ SWARUP (Dead / Retired / Elevated)

Case History

  1. Case disposedDisposed

  2. 08-May-2017

    Judgment - of Main CaseView PDF

  3. 03-Sep-2001

    ROP - of Main CaseView PDF

  4. 03-Jan-2000

    Case filed

    Registration No. C.A. No. 6125/2001

casestatus.in Summary

SUMMARY OF STATE OF JHARKHAND v. LALU PRASAD YADAV (Criminal Appeal No. 394-395 of 2017) Court's Decision The Supreme Court set aside the High Court's discharge orders and allowed the CBI's appeals, directing that trials proceed in the lower courts. The Court found no violation of Article 20(2) of the Constitution (double jeopardy) or Section 300 CrPC, and held that separate trials for different treasury defalcations are legally permissible. Key Reasoning On Double Jeopardy: Although there was one general conspiracy (1988-1996), the substantive offences—misappropriation from different treasuries in different financial years with different amounts, fake documents, and different accused persons—constitute distinct offences. The charge must be read in substance: the real offence is defalcation from a *particular* treasury in a *particular* year for a *particular* amount. On Separate Trials: - Different financial years = separate charges required (Section 212(2) CrPC limits one charge to one year maximum) - Different treasuries = different locations of crime - Conspiracy is an *allied offence*; the main offence is the substantive defalcation - Section 220 CrPC allows trying multiple offences only if they form "the same transaction"—here they do not On Issue Estoppel: The Court rejected issue estoppel pleas, noting that facts and culpability differ across periods, and it is premature to raise estoppel before evidence is recorded in separate trials. Additional Findings - The Court condoned the delay (113-222 days) in filing appeals, citing administrative procedures and the gravity of the matter, though criticizing the CBI for procedural lethargy. - The Court noted the inconsistency in the High Court judge's reasoning—he had declined to quash cases for Dr. R.K. Rana on the same facts but granted relief to Lalu Prasad Yadav and others, violating judicial consistency. - Trials are to be expedited and concluded within nine months. This case analysis is maintained by casestatus.in based on publicly available court records.

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