In the case of Sahil vs. State of NCT of Delhi, the Delhi High Court dismissed an application for eight weeks of interim bail sought on humanitarian and medical grounds. Justice Girish Kathpalia ruled that the applicant was not entitled to relief due to his prior conduct, which included overstaying a previous period of interim bail and failing to utilize that time for the very medical procedure (his wife’s surgery) cited as the reason for his release. The Court found that the applicant’s actions suggested a lack of genuine medical necessity and emphasized the importance of protecting the integrity of the trial, particularly as key injured witnesses had yet to be examined.
- Nature of the Application
The applicant, Sahil, sought interim bail for a period of eight weeks in connection with FIR No. 591/2024 (PS Narela). He is facing charges under Sections 103/109/333/324/190 of the BNS and Sections 25/27 of the Arms Act. The primary ground for the application was the impending disc prolapsed surgery of his wife, which was scheduled for July 7, 2026.
- Factual Allegations
Broadly, the prosecution alleges that the applicant, along with four co-accused, entered the house of the deceased. During the incident, the applicant’s brother allegedly opened fire, killing one person and injuring two others. The specific role attributed to the applicant is that he assaulted one of the injured victims with a danda (wooden staff) after the victim had already sustained two bullet injuries.
- Opposition by the State
The State strongly opposed the bail application on several grounds:
- Pending Witnesses: The injured persons in the case have not yet been examined by the trial court.
- Past Misconduct: The applicant was granted a previous interim bail from June 3, 2026, to June 11, 2026, for the same medical reason. However, he failed to surrender on time, only returning to custody on June 17, 2026.
- Lack of Genuineness: Despite being released specifically for his wife’s surgery in June, the applicant did not take his wife to the hospital for the first four days of his release. Multiple subsequent surgery dates passed without the procedure being conducted.
- Court’s Reasoning and Findings
The Court found the explanations provided by the applicant’s counsel regarding his past conduct to be completely unacceptable. Justice Kathpalia highlighted the following inconsistencies:
- There was no valid reason for the applicant’s failure to surrender on the expiry of his previous bail on June 11.
- The failure to take his wife to the hospital immediately upon his previous release suggested that the requirement for surgery was not genuine.
- The applicant’s conduct and the fact that public witnesses (including the injured) are still waiting to be examined weighed heavily against his release.
- Conclusion
The Court concluded that the circumstances did not make this a fit case for the grant of interim bail. Consequently, the interim bail application and the accompanying application were dismissed. The Court directed that a copy of the order be sent to the concerned Jail Superintendent to be conveyed to the applicant.
2026 DHC 5326
Sahil vs. State of NCT of Delhi(D.O.J. 03.07.2026)



