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CAN AN ILLEGAL
ARREST BE CURED BY SUBSEQUENT JUDICIAL ORDERS?
A Critical
Analysis of the Allahabad High Court’s Decision in Neeraj v. State of U.P.
in Light of Articles 21 and 22 of the Constitution of India
By – Alok Kumar
Editor- Kanishk Kr Singh & Adv. Komal
ABSTRACT
The Allahabad High Court’s recent decision in Neeraj and
Another v. State of U.P. and Another (2026 LiveLaw (AB) 305) raises a set
of questions that strike at the very heart of India’s constitutional
jurisprudence on personal liberty. The Division Bench, presided over by Justice
Siddharth and Justice Vinai Kumar Dwivedi, dismissed a habeas corpus petition
challenging an illegal arrest—not because the arrest was lawful, but because
the petitioner moved the court more than two years after his arrest, by which
time cognizance had been taken and trial proceedings under Section 309 of the
Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (CrPC) had commenced.
Controversially, the court declared the recent line of
Supreme Court judgments—including Pankaj Bansal v. Union of India (2024)
7 SCC 576, Prabir Purkayastha v. State (NCT of Delhi) (2024) 8 SCC 254, Vihaan
Kumar v. State of Haryana (2025 INSC 162), and Mihir Rajesh Shah v.
State of Maharashtra (2026) 1 SCC 500—as per incuriam and
non-binding, on the ground that they failed to consider older Constitution
Bench precedents.
This article critically examines whether an admittedly
illegal arrest can be sanitized by subsequent judicial orders, scrutinizes the
High Court’s per incuriam reasoning, and evaluates the broader
constitutional implications of its holding for Articles 21 and 22 of the
Constitution of India.
I. Introduction
Few questions in Indian criminal law have proven as
persistently contested as the following: if a person is arrested in
violation of the constitutional guarantees enshrined in Articles 21 and 22, can
that constitutional defect be erased by the subsequent passage of a remand
order, a charge-sheet, a cognizance order, or a committal?
The answer to this question has enormous practical
consequences. It determines whether the machinery of post-arrest judicial
oversight—intended to protect the accused—can instead be weaponized to launder
an initially unlawful detention into a lawful one.
The Allahabad High Court’s judgment in Neeraj and Another
v. State of U.P. and Another (“Neeraj”) answered this question in
the affirmative, at least at the post-cognizance stage. The Court held that
once a competent court takes cognizance on a charge-sheet, a challenge to the
initial remand through habeas corpus becomes non-maintainable.
The petitioner—an accused facing trial for the alleged dowry
death and murder of his wife and infant daughter—had approached the High Court
under its writ jurisdiction more than two years after his arrest, asserting
that the arresting officer had failed to communicate the grounds of arrest in
writing, in violation of Article 22(1) of the Constitution and Section 50 of
the CrPC. His regular bail application had already been rejected by the
Sessions Court.
The Bench’s decision rested on two complementary pillars:
- A
procedural holding that habeas corpus does not lie once cognizance is
taken; and
- A
substantive and highly controversial holding that the recent Supreme Court
judgments mandating immediate release for non-communication of grounds of
arrest are per incuriam and not binding on the High Court, having
been decided without adverting to binding Constitution Bench precedents.
This article proceeds as follows. Part II sets out the
factual background of Neeraj. Part III examines the constitutional and
statutory framework governing arrest, remand, and habeas corpus. Part IV traces
the evolution of the Supreme Court’s jurisprudence on grounds of arrest. Part V
critically analyses the High Court’s twin holdings on maintainability and per
incuriam. Part VI assesses the broader constitutional implications. Part
VII concludes with recommendations.
II. Factual Background: Neeraj and Another v. State of
U.P. and Another
The facts of Neeraj, as emerging from contemporaneous
reports, are not extraordinary in themselves—they are, tragically, a pattern
that recurs with troubling frequency in Indian criminal justice.
An FIR was registered at Police Station Kotwali Lalitpur
against the petitioner for offences relating to the alleged dowry death and
murder of his wife and minor daughter. He was arrested and produced before a
Remand Magistrate, who remanded him to judicial custody without, according to
the petitioner, any written communication of the grounds of arrest having been
made to him as mandated by Article 22(1) of the Constitution and Section 50 of
the CrPC.
Following investigation, a charge-sheet was filed. A
competent court took cognizance of the charge-sheet, committed the case to the
Court of Sessions, framed charges, and trial commenced.
The petitioner’s regular bail application was rejected by
the Sessions Court.
It was only after this sequence of events—spanning more than
two years—that the petitioner preferred a habeas corpus writ petition before
the Allahabad High Court, contending that his arrest was void ab initio for
want of written communication of grounds.
The State did not concede the illegality of the arrest. The
Bench, however, proceeded on the assumption that the constitutional grievance
was genuine, but held that the remedy of habeas corpus was no longer available
at the post-cognizance, mid-trial stage.
III. The Constitutional and Statutory Framework
A. Article 21: The Right to Life and Personal Liberty
Article 21 of the Constitution of India declares that no
person shall be deprived of his life or personal liberty except according to
procedure established by law.
The Supreme Court, in a long arc of judgments stretching
from Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India AIR 1978 SC 597 to D.K. Basu v.
State of West Bengal (1997) 1 SCC 416, has read this provision expansively.
The “procedure established by law” is not any
procedure; it must be just, fair, and reasonable.
An arrest that violates constitutional mandates—whether
through the failure to communicate grounds or through the failure to produce
the accused before a magistrate within twenty-four hours—violates the procedure
established by law and consequently violates Article 21.
The significance of Article 21 in the arrest context is
therefore direct: it is not merely Article 22 that is engaged when an arrest is
illegal.
A fortiori, every illegal arrest is also a violation
of Article 21.
B. Article 22: Specific Safeguards Against Arrest and
Detention
Article 22 provides a set of specific procedural guarantees
that operate as a textual supplement to the broader guarantee of personal
liberty in Article 21.
Article 22(1) 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, and that such person shall not be denied the right to
consult and to be defended by a legal practitioner of his choice.
Article 22(2) mandates production before a magistrate within
twenty-four hours.
The combined operation of Articles 21 and 22 creates a
constitutional architecture designed to subject every arrest to immediate
scrutiny and to ensure that the person arrested is never left ignorant of the
basis for his deprivation of liberty.
Crucially, the phrase “as soon as may be”
in Article 22(1) is not a license for delay.
The Supreme Court has consistently held—from Joginder
Kumar v. State of U.P. (1994) 4 SCC 260 to the more recent judgments
discussed below—that the communication of grounds must be prompt, specific, and
in writing.
A reference to a case crime number or a generic statutory
provision does not satisfy this constitutional mandate.
III. The Constitutional and Statutory Framework
C. Statutory Framework: CrPC/BNSS
Section 50 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (now
Section 47 of the Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita, 2023 (BNSS)) requires
every police officer arresting any person without a warrant to forthwith
communicate to the person the full particulars of the offence for which he is
being arrested or the other grounds for such arrest.
Section 57 of the CrPC (Section 58 of the BNSS) requires
production before a magistrate within twenty-four hours.
These provisions give statutory flesh to the skeletal
constitutional guarantees of Article 22.
The writ of habeas corpus under Article 226 of the
Constitution is the primary judicial remedy for illegal detention. It is
available as a matter of right, not discretion, and is traditionally available
at any stage of proceedings.
However, as the Court in Neeraj controversially held,
a number of precedents suggest that the remedy is unavailable once a competent
court takes cognizance.
IV. The Evolution of Supreme Court Jurisprudence on
Grounds of Arrest
A. The Early Foundations: Joginder Kumar and D.K.
Basu
The Supreme Court’s concern with arbitrary arrest is not
new.
In Joginder Kumar v. State of U.P. (1994) 4 SCC 260,
a bench of three judges emphatically held that no arrest can be made merely
because it is lawful for the officer to do so.
The power of arrest is to be exercised in proportion to the
gravity of the offence, and the arrested person must be informed of the
grounds.
In D.K. Basu v. State of West Bengal (1997) 1 SCC
416, the Court issued a comprehensive set of guidelines governing arrest,
including the requirement of an arrest memo specifying the grounds of arrest,
signed by an independent witness.
These early precedents established the principled
foundation—but their enforcement in practice remained elusive.
B. The PMLA Line: Pankaj Bansal
A significant doctrinal turn occurred in Pankaj Bansal v.
Union of India (2024) 7 SCC 576, a case arising under the Prevention of
Money Laundering Act, 2002.
The Court held that the right to be informed of the grounds
of arrest under Section 19 of the PMLA, read with Article 22(1), is not
satisfied by oral communication.
The grounds must be furnished in writing so that the person
arrested has a documentary basis on which to seek legal counsel and challenge
the arrest.
The Court specifically held that the failure to provide
written grounds vitiates the arrest.
C. Universalising the Principle: Prabir Purkayastha
In Prabir Purkayastha v. State (NCT of Delhi) (2024)
8 SCC 254, the Court—in the context of an arrest under the Unlawful Activities
(Prevention) Act, 1967 (UAPA)—extended and universalised the Pankaj Bansal
principle.
The Bench of Justices B.R. Gavai and Sandeep Mehta held that
the right under Article 22(1) to written grounds of arrest applies without
exception, regardless of the statute under which the arrest is made.
Significantly, the Court quashed the arrest and remand
order, holding that the initial constitutional defect was not cured by
subsequent proceedings.
D. Vihaan Kumar: The Constitutional Anchor
The most comprehensive restatement of the law on grounds of
arrest came in Vihaan Kumar v. State of Haryana (2025 INSC 162), decided
by a Bench of Justice Abhay S. Oka and Justice N. Kotiswar Singh.
The Court held, with unambiguous clarity, that the
requirement of informing the person arrested of the grounds of arrest is a
mandatory constitutional requirement flowing directly from Article 22 of the
Constitution—not a mere statutory formality.
Failure to comply with this requirement amounts to a
violation not only of Article 22(1) but also of the fundamental right to
personal liberty under Article 21, because the procedure established by law
under Article 21 necessarily includes the safeguards in Article 22(1).
Once an arrest is held vitiated, the Court held, the person
cannot remain in custody even for a second.
Justice Singh’s concurring opinion elaborated that written
communication is essential to ensure meaningful exercise of the right to
consult legal counsel—an oral communication is easily disputed, leaves no
documentary trail, and may not convey the specificity required to enable an
effective challenge to the arrest.
E. Mihir Rajesh Shah: The Two-Hour Rule
The Supreme Court delivered another landmark judgment in Mihir
Rajesh Shah v. State of Maharashtra (2026) 1 SCC 500 (“Mihir Rajesh
Shah”), arising from a high-profile hit-and-run case in Mumbai.
A Bench of Chief Justice B.R. Gavai and Justice Augustine
George Masih crystallised and universalised the mandate to provide written
grounds of arrest across all offences and all statutes—covering arrests for
ordinary IPC/BNS offences as much as for PMLA or UAPA offences.
The Court additionally crafted a bright-line “two-hour
rule”:
In all cases, written grounds of arrest must be furnished to
the accused at least two hours before the remand hearing, so that the accused
has a meaningful opportunity to oppose remand or seek bail.
The judgment acknowledged that exigent circumstances might
sometimes make immediate written communication impractical—such as where an
arrest is made in the midst of an ongoing crime—but held that even in such
cases written grounds must be supplied within a reasonable time, and always
before remand.
V. Critical Analysis of the Neeraj Judgment
A. The Maintainability Holding: Habeas Corpus
Post-Cognizance
The first and less controversial of the two holdings in Neeraj
is that habeas corpus is unavailable after cognizance is taken on the
charge-sheet.
The Court located the absolute cut-off at the stage of
cognizance: beyond this point, the remedy of habeas corpus becomes completely
unavailable, and any Article 21 or 22(1) grievance must be pursued through the
statutory remedy of bail or by challenging specific judicial orders through
revision or appeal.
There is settled legal authority for the proposition that
the habeas corpus writ does not lie to challenge a detention when the accused
is held under a valid judicial order.
In cases where cognizance has been taken and the accused is
remanded to judicial custody pending trial under Section 309 CrPC, the legality
of detention is directly governed by the judicial order of the trial court—not
by the initial arrest.
This principle is traceable to the Supreme Court’s
observations in Kanu Sanyal v. District Magistrate, Darjeeling AIR 1974
SC 510, where the Court emphasised that the writ examines the legality of the
current detaining order, not a prior and superseded order.
The Court in Neeraj further observed that allowing an
accused to file a habeas corpus petition challenging the initial arrest after
his bail application has been rejected by a coordinate court—or even by the
Supreme Court—would amount to an impermissible collateral attack, effectively
functioning as a lateral review of the prior bail order.
This reasoning has force.
There is a settled principle that once a court of competent
jurisdiction has lawfully taken custody of an accused through a cognizance
order, the basis of custody shifts from the police arrest to the judicial
remand, and thereafter to the Section 309 CrPC order.
It would be anomalous to allow a petitioner to use the
habeas corpus jurisdiction to re-agitate, in an indirect manner, grievances
that could and should have been raised at the bail stage.
Importantly, the Court drew attention to the petitioner’s
conduct: he had suppressed material dates and had not raised the Article 22(1)
grievance at any stage of the bail proceedings.
Courts of equity do not come to the aid of those who sit on
their rights, and the High Court applied this principle with justification.
The concern, however, is the absoluteness of the Court’s
formulation.
The proposition that habeas corpus is completely unavailable
after cognizance admits of no exception—not even for cases of grave and
egregious constitutional violations.
This may go too far.
Consider a case where the police arrested a person without
any legal authority whatsoever, without even a semblance of legal process, on a
purely fabricated FIR, and thereafter procured a collusive remand from a
corrupt magistrate.
Can it be said that habeas corpus is unavailable even in
such a case, merely because a charge-sheet has subsequently been filed?
The absoluteness of the Neeraj formulation appears to
foreclose this inquiry—a result that sits uneasily with the Supreme Court’s
teaching in Maneka Gandhi that the courts must jealously guard
fundamental rights.
B. The Per Incuriam Holding: A High Court Defying
Binding Precedents
The second and far more controversial holding in Neeraj
is the Court’s declaration that the recent Supreme Court judgments in Pankaj
Bansal, Prabir Purkayastha, Vihaan Kumar, Kasireddy
Upender Reddy, and Mihir Rajesh Shah are per incuriam and
consequently non-binding on the High Court.
The doctrine of per incuriam—meaning “through
want of care”—provides that a judgment is per incuriam if it was
decided without adverting to a statutory provision or a binding precedent that,
had it been considered, would have led to a different conclusion.
A High Court invoking per incuriam to decline to
follow a Supreme Court decision is a step of extraordinary constitutional
significance.
Article 141 of the Constitution declares that the law
declared by the Supreme Court shall be binding on all courts within the
territory of India.
This is not a matter of comity or deference; it is a
constitutional command.
The Neeraj court invoked the per incuriam doctrine
on the basis that the recent Supreme Court judgments mandating immediate
release for non-communication of grounds of arrest failed to consider older,
binding Constitution Bench judgments.
The Bench quoted approvingly the principle that a judgment
delivered per incuriam is not binding and constitutes a departure from
the rule of stare decisis.
This is an accurate statement of doctrine—but its
application in the present case is deeply questionable for several reasons.
First, the per incuriam doctrine, when invoked by a
High Court, must be applied with extraordinary restraint.
The Supreme Court has repeatedly cautioned that a High Court
cannot lightly disregard its decisions on the ground that they are per
incuriam.
In State of U.P. v. Ram Chandra Trivedi AIR 1976 SC
2547, the Supreme Court held that even if an earlier decision did not consider
some statutory provision, it is the Supreme Court alone—not the High Court—that
must decide whether that omission renders the decision per incuriam.
A High Court that disagrees with a Supreme Court ruling
should express its disagreement and await clarification by the Supreme Court;
it may not simply decline to follow the binding precedent.
Second, the High Court’s per incuriam holding is
premised on a contestable reading of the relationship between the recent
judgments and the older Constitution Bench decisions.
The Court suggested that the mandates in Pankaj Bansal,
Prabir Purkayastha, Vihaan Kumar, and Mihir Rajesh Shah—particularly
the proposition that non-communication of grounds of arrest vitiates the arrest
and that no subsequent proceedings can cure the defect—are inconsistent with
Constitution Bench authority.
But it is not evident which specific Constitution Bench
judgments the recent decisions allegedly overlooked.
The High Court’s observation that the recent judgments have
opened a “Pandora’s box” and created a “chaotic situation”
is descriptive of the practical consequences of the precedents; it is not a
legal ground for treating them as per incuriam.
Third, and most fundamentally, the High Court’s approach
privileges procedural order over substantive constitutional rights.
The concern about a flood of habeas corpus petitions is a
legitimate institutional worry—but the proper response is not to declare
binding Supreme Court judgments non-binding.
The proper response is to impose time limits on the filing
of habeas corpus petitions challenging illegal arrests, or to require that the
constitutional grievance be raised at the earliest available opportunity.
These are calibrated, proportionate responses; the
declaration of per incuriam is a blunt instrument that, if accepted,
would permit High Courts across the country to insulate themselves from the
discipline of Supreme Court precedent by invoking the same reasoning.
C. Can Subsequent Judicial Orders Cure an Illegal Arrest?
The central jurisprudential question—whether subsequent
judicial orders cure an initially illegal arrest—admits of no doctrinally clean
answer, and different courts have taken different positions at different times.
The Supreme Court in Prabir Purkayastha and Vihaan
Kumar appears to have taken the view that the initial constitutional defect
is incurable: the arrest being vitiated, the accused cannot remain in custody
even for a second, and no subsequent remand or charge-sheet can sanitise the
original violation.
This view rests on a principled constitutional foundation:
if the procedure established by law under Article 21 includes Article 22(1),
then an arrest that violates Article 22(1) is a deprivation of liberty that
lacks the authority of law from the very moment of arrest.
The remediation of this defect requires the release of the
accused—not merely an acknowledgment of the violation.
The opposing view—and the one adopted in Neeraj—holds
that once a competent court has exercised jurisdiction over the accused by
taking cognizance and has ordered his continued custody through a judicial
remand, the basis of detention has shifted.
The accused is now in custody under a valid judicial order,
not under the illegal arrest.
To say that the illegal arrest “vitiates” the
subsequent judicial remand is to use an imprecise metaphor of contamination
that has no clear stopping point.
It would imply that every judicial order made after an
illegal arrest is itself void, which would have consequences for the
charge-sheet, the cognizance order, the trial, and potentially even a
conviction.
This tension is real and profound.
It reflects a deeper structural tension in constitutional
law between the conception of rights as absolute, real-time entitlements (which
admits of no cure for violations) and the conception of rights as procedural
constraints on an otherwise continuing legal process (which permits subsequent
proceedings to be governed by their own legality).
The Supreme Court’s recent judgments appear to take the
former view; the Neeraj court took the latter.
There is, however, a middle path that the law appears to be
groping toward.
The constitutional violation of non-communication of grounds
of arrest entitles the accused to two things:
- To
challenge the arrest at the earliest available opportunity (such as by
moving for bail and asserting the constitutional violation); and
- To
seek compensation for the violation even if subsequent proceedings have
progressed.
This middle path—which has been adopted in several
jurisdictions and is consistent with the Supreme Court’s observations in Rini
Johar v. State of Madhya Pradesh (2016) 11 SCC 703—allows the
constitutional violation to be acknowledged and remediated without necessarily
rendering all subsequent proceedings void.
The Manoj Kumar v. State of U.P., Habeas Corpus Writ
Petition No. 137 of 2026 decision of the Lucknow Bench of the Allahabad High
Court, which awarded Rs. 10 lakh in compensation for non-communication
of written grounds of arrest, exemplifies this approach.
VI. Broader Constitutional Implications
A. The Institutional Dimension: High Courts and Supreme
Court Precedent
The most immediate institutional implication of Neeraj
is its invitation to High Courts across the country to evaluate, and
potentially disregard, Supreme Court precedents on grounds of per incuriam.
This is not a harmless innovation.
The constitutional authority of the Supreme Court as the
apex court—and the guarantee of uniformity of the law that authority
provides—depends critically on the compliance of the lower judiciary.
A regime in which each High Court independently assesses
whether Supreme Court decisions are per incuriam would fragment the law
and undermine the foundational constitutional principle of Article 141.
The Supreme Court itself has been emphatic on this point.
In Union of India v. Raghubir Singh (1989) 2 SCC 754,
the Chief Justice of India speaking for the Constitution Bench held that it is
not open to a High Court to ignore a Supreme Court judgment on the ground that
it was rendered without considering some earlier authority.
If the High Court believes that a Supreme Court judgment is per
incuriam, the appropriate course is to state its views and refer the
matter; it cannot unilaterally refuse to follow the binding precedent.
B. The Liberty Dimension: A Chilling Effect on the Right
to Challenge Illegal Arrests
The second implication concerns the practical access to
constitutional remedies for individuals who are illegally arrested.
The Neeraj judgment, by declaring the recent Supreme
Court precedents non-binding and by holding that habeas corpus is unavailable
after cognizance, effectively signals to accused persons that the window for
challenging an illegal arrest is narrow—perhaps confined to the period between
arrest and cognizance.
If the accused is unable to move the court during that brief
window—because, for instance, he is in police custody and lacks access to
counsel—he loses his constitutional remedy permanently.
This chilling effect is compounded by the reality of the
Indian criminal justice system, where the period between arrest and the filing
of a charge-sheet can be lengthy, and where the communication of grounds of
arrest to family members or lawyers is not always prompt.
The constitutional safeguards of Article 22 were designed
precisely for situations like these—for the moment of vulnerability when the
state’s coercive power is at its most acute and the individual’s access to
legal protection is at its most limited.
C. The Remedy Gap: Between Habeas Corpus and Bail
The Neeraj court’s suggestion that post-cognizance
constitutional grievances about the illegality of arrest must be agitated
through the remedy of regular bail does not fully address the problem.
A bail court assesses the likelihood of bail in light of the
gravity of the offence, the antecedents of the accused, and the risk of flight
or tampering with evidence.
It does not—and structurally cannot—provide the same inquiry
as the habeas corpus court, which focuses exclusively on the legality of the
deprivation of liberty.
The two remedies serve different purposes and protect
different interests.
A person whose bail is denied has not had the legality of
his arrest judicially examined.
To substitute bail for habeas corpus is to leave a remedy
gap in the constitutional architecture.
VII. Conclusion and Recommendations
The Allahabad High Court’s decision in Neeraj v. State of
U.P. is both significant and troubling.
It is significant because it directly confronts the
practical tensions created by the Supreme Court’s recent jurisprudence on
grounds of arrest—tensions that, as the Court correctly observed, have led to a
surge in belated habeas corpus petitions.
It is troubling because the Court’s chosen remedy—declaring
binding Supreme Court precedents per incuriam—is constitutionally
impermissible and threatens to unravel the rule of law that Article 141 was
designed to secure.
The core constitutional question—whether an illegal arrest
can be cured by subsequent judicial orders—remains unresolved.
The Supreme Court will inevitably be called upon to provide
a definitive answer.
In this author’s submission, the answer must be calibrated
rather than absolute.
An illegal arrest should not automatically vitiate all
subsequent proceedings; that would lead to absurd and unjust consequences,
including the release of persons who may pose a genuine danger to society.
At the same time, an illegal arrest should not simply be
forgotten once cognizance is taken; the constitutional violation must be
acknowledged, the accused must be given a meaningful opportunity to challenge
the arrest at the appropriate stage, and compensation must be awarded where the
violation is established.
Several specific recommendations follow from this analysis.
First, the Supreme Court should, at the earliest
opportunity, authoritatively resolve the conflict between the Neeraj holding
and its own recent precedents—either by confirming the per incuriam
characterisation or by reiterating the binding nature of the Vihaan Kumar
and Mihir Rajesh Shah line of cases.
Second, a clear time limit—perhaps the stage of
cognizance—should be established for challenges to the legality of an arrest
through habeas corpus, but with exceptions carved out for cases of gross
illegality.
Third, the remedy of compensation for violations of Articles
21 and 22—as demonstrated in Manoj Kumar—should be developed as a
parallel track to habeas corpus, providing meaningful redress without
disrupting the progress of criminal trials.
Fourth, state governments, including the Government of Uttar
Pradesh, should scrupulously implement the directives issued by the Supreme
Court in Mihir Rajesh Shah regarding the written communication of
grounds of arrest, so that the constitutional violation at the root of these
disputes is prevented in the first instance.
The personal liberty of the individual stands at the summit
of constitutional values.
Neeraj v. State of U.P. is a reminder that the
machinery designed to protect that liberty—habeas corpus, written grounds of
arrest, prompt production before a magistrate—requires not only judicial
vigilance but also doctrinal coherence.
Both appear, at this moment, to be in short supply.
REFERENCES
I. CASES
- Neeraj
and Another v. State of U.P. and Another, 2026 LiveLaw (AB) 305
(Allahabad H.C.).
- Pankaj
Bansal v. Union of India, (2024) 7 SCC 576 (India).
- Prabir
Purkayastha v. State (NCT of Delhi), (2024) 8 SCC 254, 2024 INSC 414
(India).
- Vihaan
Kumar v. State of Haryana, 2025 INSC 162 (India).
- Mihir
Rajesh Shah v. State of Maharashtra, (2026) 1 SCC 500, 2025 INSC 1288
(India).
- Maneka
Gandhi v. Union of India, AIR 1978 SC 597 (India).
- D.K.
Basu v. State of West Bengal, (1997) 1 SCC 416 (India).
- Joginder
Kumar v. State of U.P., (1994) 4 SCC 260 (India).
- Kanu
Sanyal v. District Magistrate, Darjeeling, AIR 1974 SC 510 (India).
- State
of U.P. v. Ram Chandra Trivedi, AIR 1976 SC 2547 (India).
- Union
of India v. Raghubir Singh, (1989) 2 SCC 754 (India).
- Rini
Johar v. State of Madhya Pradesh, (2016) 11 SCC 703 (India).
- Manoj
Kumar Thru. His Son Mudit Kumar v. State of U.P., Habeas Corpus Writ
Petition No. 137 of 2026 (Allahabad H.C., Lucknow Bench, Apr. 29, 2026),
Neutral Citation No. 2026:AHC-LKO:31073-DB.
- Santosh
Gupta v. State of U.P. (Lawbeat.in, May 2026).
II. CONSTITUTIONAL AND STATUTORY PROVISIONS
- INDIA
CONST. art. 21.
- INDIA
CONST. art. 22.
- INDIA
CONST. art. 141.
- INDIA
CONST. art. 226.
- The
Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973, §§ 50, 57, 167, 309 (India).
- The
Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita, 2023, §§ 47, 58 (India).
- The
Prevention of Money Laundering Act, 2002, § 19 (India).
- The
Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, 1967, § 43B (India).
