Dolat Ram v. State of Haryana – (1995) 1 SCC 349

Dolat Ram v. State of Haryana

📌 Citation

(1995) 1 SCC 349
Bench: Kuldip Singh and S. P. Bharucha


🔹 Background

The accused had been granted bail. Subsequently, the complainant sought cancellation of bail. The High Court cancelled the bail order. The matter reached the Supreme Court to determine the correct principles governing cancellation.


🔹 Core Issue

What are the grounds for cancellation of bail once it has already been granted?

Is cancellation governed by the same principles as rejection of bail?


🔹 Landmark Principles Laid Down

1️⃣ Rejection vs Cancellation — Different Standards

The Court clearly held:

Rejection of bail at initial stage and cancellation of bail already granted stand on different footings.

  • Rejection → Based on prima facie case, gravity, etc.

  • Cancellation → Requires supervening circumstances.


2️⃣ Very Cogent and Overwhelming Circumstances Required

Bail once granted should not be cancelled mechanically.

Grounds include:

  • Misuse of liberty

  • Interference with investigation

  • Threatening witnesses

  • Attempt to abscond

  • Tampering with evidence


3️⃣ Mere Seriousness of Offence Not Enough

Gravity alone cannot justify cancellation if no misuse of liberty is shown.


🔹 Key Observation

The Court emphasized that once liberty has been granted, it cannot be withdrawn lightly.


🔹 Legal Significance

This case is foundational in cancellation of bail jurisprudence and is frequently cited along with:

  • Sanjay Chandra v. CBI (liberty principles)

It established the “supervening circumstances test.”


🔹 Practical Court Application

While deciding cancellation application, court must examine:

  1. Whether accused violated bail conditions

  2. Whether new facts emerged after grant

  3. Whether liberty is being abused

Without these, cancellation is improper.


🔹 Exam-Ready 5-Mark Line

“In Dolat Ram (1995), the Supreme Court held that cancellation of bail requires very cogent and overwhelming circumstances such as misuse of liberty or interference with justice, and stands on a different footing from rejection of bail.”

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

error: Content is protected !!