principle of bail
laid down by the Hon'ble Court time and again and
mechanically grants the bail against the material available
on record ... reproduced as under:
"8. There cannot be any dispute that excessive bail is no bail and
onerous conditions ought not to be imposed while
there is
prima facie case against the accused. For the
purpose of bail, the court must not undertake
meticulous examination of the evidence collected ... English Bill
of Rights, 1689 which prescribed that "excessive
bail ought not to be required, nor excessive fines
imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments
held as under:
8. There cannot be any dispute that excessive
bail is no bail and onerous conditions ought
not to be imposed while bail
principle has been that
the excessive bail is no bail. To grant bail and
thereafter to impose excessive and onerous conditions,
is to take away ... Sureties are essential to
ensure the presence of the accused, released on bail.
At the same time, where the court is faced with the
situation
Bank.
3. Following
aspects are considered :-
(1) This
is an excessive bail application.
(2) The
applicant has been released by this Court on temporary bail
bailed goods from the defendant is pleaded by the plaintiff. It is not the case of the plaintiff that it had bailed various amounts with ... over and, therefore, bailer demands back bailed goods from the bailee. On the excess language of the plain and especially in the light
amount of the bail in case the accused fails to appear to answer the charge. This system of bails operates very harshly against the poor ... released on bail. The poor find it difficult to furnish bail even without sureties because very often the amount of the bail fixed
abscond, if he was so released on bail, etc. etc,, ordered to release him on bail on his executing personal bond ... precedent before he could be released on bail is on the face of it quite "unrealistically excessive, harsh and unjust" the same
imposed must not be harsh, onerous or excessive so as to frustrate the very object of bail, or indirectly deny the bail, or protection
exploit the
opportunity to inflict further crimes on the members of society. Bail
discretion, on the basis of evidence about the criminal record ... excesses and injustice creep
subtly into the discretionary curial technique. Bad record and police
prediction of criminal prospects to invalidate the bail plea are
admissible