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HomeMaman Mandal vs State Of Kerala on 6 April, 2026

Maman Mandal vs State Of Kerala on 6 April, 2026

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Kerala High Court

Maman Mandal vs State Of Kerala on 6 April, 2026

Author: Kauser Edappagath

Bench: Kauser Edappagath

                                                      2026:KER:30396

             IN THE HIGH COURT OF KERALA AT ERNAKULAM

                               PRESENT

        THE HONOURABLE DR. JUSTICE KAUSER EDAPPAGATH

   MONDAY, THE 6TH DAY OF APRIL 2026 / 16TH CHAITHRA, 1948

                     BAIL APPL. NO. 1846 OF 2026

     CRIME NO.64/2026 OF RAILWAY POLICE STATION, KOLLAM

PETITIONERS/ACCUSED NOS.1 & 2:

    1    MAMAN MANDAL
         AGED 28 YEARS, SON OF ANARUL MANDAL
         KAZIPARA, MURSHIDABAD, WEST BENGAL, PIN - 742306

    2    MASIDHUL ISLAM
         AGED 24 YEARS SON OF ASHADUL
         BICHPARA, DHANIRAMPUR, BAMNABAD P.O., MURSHIDABAD,
         WEST BENGAL, PIN - 742306

         SRI.P.MOHAMED SABAH
         SRI.LIBIN STANLEY
         SMT.SAIPOOJA
         SRI.SADIK ISMAYIL
         SMT.R.GAYATHRI
         SRI.M.MAHIN HAMZA
         SRI.ALWIN JOSEPH
         SRI.BENSON AMBROSE
RESPONDENTS/STATE & COMPLAINANT:

    1    STATE OF KERALA
         REPRESENTED BY THE PUBLIC PROSECUTOR, HIGH COURT
         OF KERALA, ERNAKULAM DISTRICT, PIN - 682031

    2    THE STATION HOUSE OFFICER
         KOLLAM RAILWAY POLICE STATION,
         KOLLAM DISTRICT, PIN - 691001

         SRI.K.A. NOUSHAD, SR. PP
     THIS BAIL APPLICATION HAVING COME UP FOR ADMISSION ON
06.04.2026,    THE    COURT   ON   THE   SAME   DAY   DELIVERED   THE
FOLLOWING:
                                                      2026:KER:30396
BAIL APPL. NO. 1846 OF 2026

                                   2



                              ORDER

This application is filed under Section 483 of the Bharatiya

Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita, 2023 (for short, BNSS), seeking regular

SPONSORED

bail.

2. The applicants are the accused Nos.1 and 2 in Crime

No.64/2026 of Railway Police Station, Kollam District. The

offences alleged are punishable under Sections 20(b)(ii)(B) and 29

of the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act, 1985.

3. The prosecution case, in short, is that on 18.02.2026 at

23.55 hours, while the police were conducting patrol duty on the

platform of Kollam Railway Station, the applicants were found in

possession of 17.110 kilograms of ganja in the shoulder bags they

were carrying and thus the applicants committed the aforesaid

offences.

4. I have heard Sri.P.Mohamed Sabah, the learned counsel

for the applicants and Sri.K.A.Noushad, the learned Senior Public

Prosecutor. Perused the case diary.

5. The learned counsel appearing for the applicants

submitted that the requirement of informing the arrested person

of the grounds of arrest is mandatory under Article 22(1) of the
2026:KER:30396
BAIL APPL. NO. 1846 OF 2026

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Constitution of India and Section 47 of the BNSS and inasmuch as

the applicants were not furnished with the grounds of arrest, their

arrest was illegal and they are liable to be released on bail. On the

other hand, the learned Public Prosecutor submitted that all legal

formalities were complied with in accordance with Chapter V of

the BNSS at the time of the arrest of the applicants. It is further

submitted that the alleged incident occurred as part of the

intentional criminal acts of the applicants and hence they are not

entitled to bail at this stage.

6. The applicants were arrested on 19.02.2026 and since

then they are in judicial custody.

7. Though prima facie there are materials on record to

connect the applicants with the crime, since the applicants have

raised a question of absence of communication of the grounds of

their arrest, let me consider the same.

8. Chapter V of BNSS, 2023 deals with the arrest of

persons. Sub-section (1) of Section 35 of BNSS lists cases when

police may arrest a person without a warrant. Section 47 of BNSS

clearly states that every police officer or other person arresting

any person without a warrant shall forthwith communicate to him

full particulars of the offence for which he is arrested or other
2026:KER:30396
BAIL APPL. NO. 1846 OF 2026

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grounds for such arrest. Article 22(1) of the Constitution of India

provides that no person who is arrested shall be detained in

custody without being informed, as soon as may be, of the

grounds for such arrest. Thus, the requirement of informing the

person arrested of the grounds of arrest is not a formality but a

mandatory statutory and constitutional requirement.

Noncompliance with Article 22(1) of the Constitution will be a

violation of the fundamental right of the accused guaranteed by

the said Article. It will also amount to a violation of the right to

personal liberty guaranteed by Article 21 of the Constitution.

9. The question whether failure to communicate written

grounds of arrest would render the arrest illegal, necessitating the

release of the accused, is no longer res integra. The Supreme

Court in Pankaj Bansal v. Union of India and Others [(2024)

7 SCC 576], while dealing with Section 19 of the Prevention of

Money Laundering Act, 2002, has held that no person who is

arrested shall be detained in custody without being informed, as

soon as may be, of the grounds for such arrest. It was further held

that a copy of written grounds of arrest should be furnished to the

arrested person as a matter of course and without exception. In

Prabir Purkayastha v. State (NCT of Delhi) (2024) 8 SCC
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BAIL APPL. NO. 1846 OF 2026

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254], while dealing with the offences under the Unlawful Activities

Prevention Act,1967 (for short, ‘UAPA’), it was held that any

person arrested for an allegation of commission of offences under

the provisions of UAPA or for that matter any other offence(s) has

a fundamental and a statutory right to be informed about the

grounds of arrest in writing and a copy of such written grounds of

arrest has to be furnished to the arrested person as a matter of

course and without exception at the earliest. It was observed that

the right to be informed about the grounds of arrest flows from

Article 22(1) of the Constitution of India, and any infringement of

this fundamental right would vitiate the process of arrest and

remand.

10. In Vihaan Kumar v. State of Haryana and Others

(2025 SCC OnLine SC 269], the Supreme Court, while dealing with

the offences under IPC, reiterated that the requirement of

informing the person arrested of the grounds of arrest is not a

formality but a mandatory constitutional requirement. It was

further held that if the grounds of arrest are not informed, as soon

as may be after the arrest, it would amount to the violation of the

fundamental right of the arrestee guaranteed under Article 22(1)

of the Constitution, and the arrest will be rendered illegal. It was
2026:KER:30396
BAIL APPL. NO. 1846 OF 2026

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also observed in the said judgment that although there is no

requirement to communicate the grounds of arrest in writing,

there is no harm if the grounds of arrest are communicated in

writing and when arrested accused alleges non-compliance with

the requirements of Article 22(1) of the Constitution, the burden

will always be on the Investigating Officer/Agency to prove

compliance with the requirements of Article 22(1).

11. In Kasireddy Upender Reddy v. State of Andhra

Pradesh (2025 SCC OnLine SC 1228), the Supreme Court held

that reading out the grounds of arrest stated in the arrest warrant

would tantamount to compliance of Art.22 of the Constitution. It

was further held that when an acused person is arrested on

warrant and it contains the reason for arrest, there is no

requirement to furnish the grounds for arrest separately and a

reading of the warrant to him itself is sufficient compliance with

the requirement of informing the grounds of his arrest. In State

of Karnataka v. Sri Darshan (2025 SCC OnLine SC 1702), it was

held that neither the Constitution nor the relevant statute

prescribes a specific form or insists upon a written communication

in every case. Substantial compliance of the same is sufficient

unless demonstrable prejudice is shown. It was further held that
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BAIL APPL. NO. 1846 OF 2026

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individualised grounds are not an inflexible requirement post

Bansal and absence of written grounds does not ipso facto render

the arrest illegal unless it results in demonstrable prejudice or

denial of an opportunity to defend. However, in Ahmed Mansoor

v. State (2025 SCC OnLine SC 2650), another two Judge Bench of

the Supreme Court distinguished the principles declared in Sri

Darshan (supra) and observed that in Sri Darshan (supra), the

facts governing are quite different in the sense that it was a case

dealing with the cancellation of bail where the chargesheet had

been filed and the grounds of detention were served immediately.

Recently, in Mihir Rajesh Shah v. State of Maharashtra and

Another (2025 SCC OnLine SC 2356), the three Judge Bench of

the Supreme Court held that grounds of arrest must be informed

to the arrested person in each and every case without exception

and the mode of communication of such grounds must be in

writing in the language he understands. It was further held that

non supply of grounds of arrest in writing to the arrestee prior to

or immediately after arrest would not vitiate such arrest provided

said grounds are supplied in writing within a reasonable time and

in any case two hours prior to the production of arrestee before

the Magistrate.

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BAIL APPL. NO. 1846 OF 2026

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12. A Single Bench of this Court in Yazin S. v. State of

Kerala (2025 KHC OnLine 2383) and in Rayees R.M. v. State of

Kerala (2025 KHC 2086) held that in NDPS cases, since the

quantity of contraband determines whether the offence is bailable

or non bailable, specification of quantity is mandatory for effective

communication of grounds. It was further held that burden is on

the police to establish proper communication of the arrest. In

Vishnu N.P. v. State of Kerala (2025 KHC OnLine 1262),

another Single Judge of this Court relying on all the decisions of

the Supreme Court mentioned above specifically observed that

the arrest intimation must mention not only the penal section but

also the quantity of contraband allegedly seized.

13. The following principles of law emerge from the above

mentioned binding precedents.

(i) The constitutional mandate of informing the arrestee the

grounds of arrest is mandatory in all offences under all statutes

including offences under IPC/BNS.

(ii) The grounds of arrest must be communicated in writing

to the arrestees in the language they understand.

(iii) In cases where the arresting officer/person is unable to

communicate the grounds of arrest in writing soon after arrest, it
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BAIL APPL. NO. 1846 OF 2026

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be so done orally. The said grounds be communicated in writing

within a reasonable time and in any case at least two hours prior

to the production of the arrestee for the remand proceedings

before the Magistrate.

(iv) In NDPS cases, specification of quantity of the

contraband seized is mandatory for effective communication of

grounds of arrest.

(v) In case of non compliance of the above, the arrest and

the subsequent remand would be rendered illegal and the

arrestee should be set free forthwith.

(vi) The burden is on the police to establish the proper

communication of grounds of arrest.

(vii) The filing of charge sheet and cognizance of the order

cannot validate unconstitutional arrest.

14. I went through the case diary. On a perusal of the case

diary, it is noticed that separate grounds for arrest were

communicated to the applicants as well as the relatives. However,

there is no reference to the quantity of the contraband seized

from the applicants. Hence, I hold that the requirement of Article

22(1) of the Constitution and Section 47 of BNSS have not been

satisfied. Therefore, applicants’ arrest and their subsequent
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BAIL APPL. NO. 1846 OF 2026

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remand are nonest and they are entitled to be released on bail.

In the result, the application is allowed on the following

conditions: –

(i) The applicants shall be released on bail on executing a

bond for Rs.1,00,000/- (Rupees One lakh only) each with two

solvent sureties for the like sum each to the satisfaction of the

jurisdictional Magistrate/Court.

(ii) The applicants shall fully co-operate with the

investigation.

(iii) The applicants shall appear before the investigating

officer between 10.00 a.m and 11.00 a.m. every Saturday until

further orders. They shall also appear before the investigating

officer as and when required.

(iv) The applicants shall not commit any offence of a like

nature while on bail.

(v) The applicants shall not attempt to contact any of the

prosecution witnesses, directly or through any other person, or in

any other way try to tamper with the evidence or influence any

witnesses or other persons related to the investigation.

(vi) The applicants shall not leave the State of Kerala

without the permission of the trial Court.

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BAIL APPL. NO. 1846 OF 2026

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(vii) The application, if any, for deletion/modification of the

bail conditions or cancellation of bail on the grounds of violating

the bail conditions shall be filed at the jurisdictional court.

Sd/-

DR. KAUSER EDAPPAGATH
JUDGE
NP
2026:KER:30396
BAIL APPL. NO. 1846 OF 2026

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APPENDIX OF BAIL APPL. NO. 1846 OF 2026

PETITIONER ANNEXURES

Annexure 1 TRUE COPY OF FIR IN CRIME NO. 64/2026 OF
KOLLAM RAILWAY POLICE STATION, KOLLAM
DISTRICT
Annexure 2 TRUE COPY OF THE ORDER DATED 23.03.2025
IN CRL.M.P NO.04/2026 IN CRIME NO.

64/2026 OF KOLLAM RAILWAY POLICE STATION
PASSED BY THE HONOURABLE PRINCIPAL
SESSION’S COURT, KOLLAM



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