In the matter of Shaurya Sunil Kumar Singh vs. Central Bureau of Investigation (2026 INSC 666), the Supreme Court of India ruled that the failure of the investigating agency to file additional copies of the charge-sheet, as required under Section 193(8) of the Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita (BNSS), 2023, does not entitle an accused to “default bail”. The Court clarified that the right to default bail is extinguished the moment a charge-sheet containing the requisite details is filed within the statutory period, and that procedural requirements concerning the supply of copies are directory rather than mandatory for the purpose of defeating a default bail claim.
Background and Legal Issue
- Case Origin: The appellant was arrested on July 13, 2025, in connection with an FIR involving cyber fraud, money laundering, and corruption offenses.
- The Dispute: The prosecution filed a charge-sheet against the appellant on September 2, 2025. The appellant argued that because he was not supplied with the necessary copies of the charge-sheet and documents within the statutory period, he became eligible for default bail under Section 187(3) of the BNSS.
- Lower Court Rulings: Both the Special Judge (CBI) and the Bombay High Court dismissed the appellant’s applications, holding that the non-supply of copies does not constitute a valid ground for granting default bail.
Court’s Analysis
- Statutory Interpretation:
- The Court compared Section 167 of the CrPC with Section 187 of the BNSS, finding them substantially identical regarding the provision for default bail.
- It noted that while Section 193(8) of the BNSS introduces a requirement for the police to submit additional copies of the report for the accused, this does not alter the fundamental criteria for default bail—which is the timely filing of the police report.
- The Court reaffirmed that Section 193(8) and the associated supply requirements under Section 230 of the BNSS are directory in nature, serving to facilitate the accused’s defense rather than providing a loophole for bail.
- Precedent and Principles:
- The Court relied on established principles, noting that default bail is a conditional right that exists only while the investigation is pending. Once the charge-sheet is filed in compliance with the required form, the right to default bail ceases.
- Referring to CBI v. R.S. Pai and CBI v. Kapil Wadhawan, the Court held that the absence of certain documents or copies does not vitiate the charge-sheet or invalidate the commencement of cognizance by the Magistrate.
Final Order
- The Supreme Court dismissed the appeal and affirmed the order of the Bombay High Court.
- The Court clarified that the appellant’s pending regular bail application must be considered independently by the appropriate court on its own merits, as the dismissal of the default bail plea does not preclude the assessment of a regular bail application.
2026 INSC 666
Shaurya Sunil Kumar Singh V. Central Bureau of Investigation (D.O.J. 01.07.2026)



