In Vasantha v. State of Tamil Nadu and others (2026 INSC 513), the Supreme Court addressed a “sordid saga” involving a 75-year-old mother who accused her son and daughter-in-law of massive financial fraud and rendering her homeless. The Court set aside an order of the Madras High Court that had granted the accused anticipatory bail despite a previous dismissal by another bench just a month earlier. The Supreme Court ruled that the High Court erred by treating the matter as a mere “real estate business” dispute, failing to account for the abuse of process by the accused in filing multiple bail petitions in quick succession and the gravity of the allegations involving the betrayal of a family elder.
Summary of the Case
- Allegations of Fraud
- The Parties: The appellant, Vasantha, is a 75-year-old widow with two sons and three daughters. The accused (Respondents 2 and 3) are her son, Karthikeyan Manikandan, and his wife.
- The Scheme: Vasantha alleged that the accused induced her to transfer family properties into her name and then sell over 11 acres of land. While she was told the land sold for approximately Rs. 9.65 crores, she later discovered through an Income Tax notice that the actual sale price was much higher—around Rs. 22 crores—and that the extra funds were paid separately to the accused.
- Abandonment: She further alleged that after promising to maintain her, the accused transferred her house into the son’s name and drove her out, leaving her homeless.
- Procedural History and Abuse of Process
- FIR and Initial Denials: An FIR was registered in May 2025 for cheating, criminal breach of trust, and violations of the Senior Citizens Act. The District Court and the Madras High Court (in August 2025) initially denied anticipatory bail, noting the need for custodial interrogation to trace the flow of funds.
- Successive Petitions: Within a month of the High Court’s denial, the accused filed a fresh petition before a different judge, who granted them bail in September 2025 without mentioning or addressing the earlier dismissal.
- Stay of Proceedings: Following the grant of bail, the accused immediately moved to quash the FIR and secured an interim stay on all further proceedings, bringing the investigation to a “grinding halt”.
- The Supreme Court’s Findings
- Abuse of Legal Process: The Court condemned the practice of filing three anticipatory bail petitions in three months as a “gamble” and a clear abuse of the legal process intended to pre-emptively secure liberty.
- Lack of Judicial Discipline: The Court criticized the High Court judge for failing to advert to the previous dismissal or the intervention application filed by the mother.
- Gravity of the Offense: The Court rejected the characterization of the case as a simple money dispute over land rates. It emphasized that the accused allegedly took undue advantage of a septuagenarian family elder to the detriment of other family members, requiring serious judicial consideration rather than threshold relief.
- Non-Cooperation: The State informed the Court that although the accused appeared before investigators, they failed to cooperate or produce documents related to the actual land sale price.
- Final Order The Supreme Court allowed the appeal, setting aside the High Court’s grant of anticipatory bail and restoring the path for the investigation to proceed against the accused.
2026 INSC 513
Vasantha V. State of Tamil Nadu And Others (D.O.J. 15.05.2026)




