At the same time, Justice Chauhan said he is not rejecting the idea of recommending guidelines for judges on grant of bail and the Commission will examine it.
"My experience as a lawyer and a judge had been that it is the discretion of the court depending upon the facts of a case... Court makes up its mind in half-a-second on whether bail should be granted or not... Whether it is a fit case for bail or not," the newly-appointed Chairman of the 21st Law Commission told PTI.
"Sometime they cannot even bring the surety. Even if the court grants the bail, they cannot go out. We can suggest something only on these lines, but there can't be any guidelines for the judge," he said, responding to a reference made by the Law Ministry to the panel to examine the possibility of coming out with a separate Bail Act.
However, he added, "Not refusing guidelines for judges. We will study, but I don't think it is required."
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He said some suggestion may be made on "how to reduce the surety amount, in what condition it can be reduced. There must be some guarantee of his presence in the court in the future, otherwise people will get bail and disappear. That will also create a problem. So to make bail easy is not a solution to the problem."
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"One type of guideline may be there that at the appellate
stage or even at the trial stage if the person has served a part of sentence which can be awarded on the conclusion of the trial, his bail application may be considered. That may be there," Justice Chauhan explained.
In September last, government had said that it is contemplating a comprehensive Bail Act clearly defining the conditions for grant of relief to the accused so as to no longer leave it to the discretion of courts.
He had suggested the need to examine the desirability of having a separate Bail Act under a "major revamp" of the bail system. Law Secretary P K Malhotra had referred the matter to the Law Commission requesting it to submit a report within six months.
Gowda said though the judiciary adopts a very elaborate procedure to deal with matters related to grant of bail, "still the system has the general perception among people that grant or denial is highly unpredictable...The bail system is linked inextricably to property and financial well-being of the accused, meaning thereby that accused persons with means."
Noting that there is a "growing dissatisfaction among public about the system of grant of bail", he said though grant of bail is a uniform and reasonable provision in theory, "in practice it does not prove to be so."
The occupancy in Indian prisons has been reported to be consisting of 1/3 of convicts and 2/3 of undertrials.
The Supreme Court has observed that bail and not jail is the rule.