UP Authorities' Arrest Blunder Costs State ₹10 Lakh: Allahabad HC Frees Man After 3 Months' Illegal Jail Stint

In a stern rebuke to procedural lapses by Uttar Pradesh police, the Allahabad High Court's Lucknow Bench has declared the arrest of Manoj Kumar illegal, ordered his immediate release, and slapped the state with ₹10 lakh in exemplary compensation. Justices Abdul Moin and Pramod Kumar Srivastava ruled that failing to provide written grounds of arrest—merely noting a case number—flagrantly violates Article 22(1) of the Constitution. This habeas corpus petition (No. 137 of 2026) underscores the Supreme Court's mandate from Mihir Rajesh Shah v. State of Maharashtra .

From FIR to False Imprisonment: The Timeline of Injustice

The saga began with FIR No. 244 of 2024 lodged on September 3, 2024, at Police Station Asiwan, Unnao, against Manoj Kumar. Nearly 17 months later, on January 27, 2026, he was arrested. The arrest memo (Annexure-3) shockingly listed only the case crime number in Column 13, omitting any specific grounds. The next day, Additional Chief Judicial Magistrate-III, Unnao, granted remand on January 28, 2026, without addressing this deficiency.

Manoj's anticipatory bail plea (No. 3614 of 2025) had already been rejected by the District & Sessions Judge, Unnao, on January 7, 2026. Filed through his son Mudit Kumar, the habeas corpus writ challenged the arrest, remand, and ongoing detention as unconstitutional. By April 2026, Manoj had endured over three months in jail—a period the court decried as a gross violation of his fundamental rights.

As reported in LiveLaw (2026 LiveLaw (AB) 265), this mirrors a pattern of post- Mihir Rajesh Shah scrutiny, where courts demand strict adherence to arrest safeguards.

Petitioner's Plea: 'Arrest Memo Was a Mere Number Game'

Counsel Akhilesh Kumar Tripathi and Prashant Tiwari argued that the arrest breached Supreme Court directives in Mihir Rajesh Shah v. State of Maharashtra (2026 (1) SCC 500), which mandates furnishing written grounds of arrest "as soon as may be" under Article 22(1), read with Article 21. They highlighted that the memo's reference to just the FIR number fell short, echoing Dr. Rajinder Rajan v. Union of India (2026 LiveLaw (SC) 327). Even post-arrest remands and potential charge-sheets couldn't cure the initial illegality, per the court's earlier order on April 24, 2026, and Shivam Chaurasiya v. State of U.P. (2026:AHC-LKO:10501-DB).

The team stressed: once the arrest's foundation crumbles, the remand superstructure collapses, entitling Manoj to liberty.

State's Silence Speaks Volumes: No Defense, Just Delays

Learned AGA for respondents (State of U.P., Principal Secretary Home, and others) conceded the binding nature of Mihir Rajesh Shah and related precedents but offered no rebuttal to the procedural flaw. On April 24, the bench sought an explanation from Additional Chief Secretary (Home) on exemplary costs for three months' illegal incarceration. The response? A personal affidavit promising a DGP report—evading the core query entirely.

The court lambasted this as "non-application of mind," noting officials' failure to release Manoj despite prima facie findings of illegality.

Decoding the Doctrine: Why 'Case Number' ≠ 'Grounds of Arrest'

Drawing from a catena of Supreme Court rulings, the bench dissected Article 22(1)'s "sacrosanct" mandate. In Mihir Rajesh Shah , Justices Abhay S. Oka and N. Kotiswar Singh held that grounds must be supplied in writing , in a comprehensible language, without exception—failure vitiates arrest and remand. Prabir Purkayastha v. State (NCT of Delhi) (2024) 8 SCC 254 reinforced that oral intimation or FIR references don't suffice; written grounds enable legal consultation and bail opposition.

Dr. Rajinder Rajan explicitly rejected "case number" as proxy grounds. The bench applied this to facts: post-November 6, 2025 ( Mihir judgment date), UP police ignored the protocol. Remands under Section 167 CrPC couldn't legitimize the flaw, as affirmed in Shivam Chaurasiya . Citing Rini Johar v. State of Madhya Pradesh (2016) 11 SCC 703 for compensation quantum, the court quantified agony at ₹10 lakh, recoverable from erring officials.

Precedents like Joginder Kumar v. State of U.P. (1994) urged cautious arrests, barring heinous crimes.

Court's Cutting Words: Quotes That Sting

  • On procedural sanctity : "Supply of grounds of arrest to the person being arrested is a constitutional mandate... non-compliance will result in breach... rendering the arrest and remand illegal."
  • Rebuking officials : "If this is the non-application of mind at the end of the highest authority of the Home Department... we can well understand as to how the other authorities of the State are working!!!"
  • On continued detention : "Despite the order... the respondent authorities have failed to wake up from their slumber and the illegal incarceration... still continues."
  • Liberty's price : Echoing Rini Johar , "Liberty... cannot be allowed to be frozen in such a contrived winter."

Liberty Restored, Accountability Enforced: What Happens Next?

The writ stands allowed: arrest declared illegal, January 28 remand quashed, Manoj freed forthwith (barring other cases). State must pay ₹10 lakh within four weeks, recoverable from responsible officers. This ruling amplifies Mihir Rajesh Shah 's teeth, signaling zero tolerance for arrest shortcuts. Future policing in UP—and beyond—must prioritize written grounds, or face not just release orders, but hefty public purses.

As LiveLaw Hindi coverage notes, the bench's frustration peaked at the Additional Chief Secretary's evasive affidavit, underscoring systemic inertia.