Delhi HC Grants Bail to Dubai-based Businessman Ramesh Mangalani in PMLA Case Alleging Siphoning off Amount through Fake Invoices. The petitioner seeks regular bail in proceedings arising from the Enforcement Directorate's registration of a case under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act. The allegations involve the siphoning off of funds through fake invoices. The petitioner, who is a resident of Dubai, was arrested in Mumbai and subsequently filed a bail petition. The court granted bail considering the petitioner's role and the allegations made in the case.

By way of the present petition under section 439 (of Income Tax Act, 1961) of the Code of
Criminal Procedure, 1973 („Cr.P.C.‟ for short) read with section 45 (of Income Tax Act, 1961) of
the Prevention of Money Laundering Act, 2002 („PMLA‟ for short),
the petitioner seeks regular bail in proceedings arising from ECIR No.
DLZO-II/35/2020/721 dated 24.09.2020 registered by the
Enforcement Directorate („ED‟ for short) under Sections 3 (of Income Tax Act, 1961) and 4 of
the PMLA.
2. The matter arises from FIR No. 1/2020 dated 01.01.2020 registered at
P.S. Economic Offences Wing („EOW‟ for short), in respect of the
predicate offences alleged under sections 409 (of Income Tax Act, 1961), 467, 468, 471, 477A
and 120B of the Indian Penal Code, 1860 („IPC‟ for short). The FIR
was registered on the complaint of one Mr. Vinod Rajagopalan in his
capacity as the Authorised Signatory of M/s. Malav Holdings Private
Limited („MHL‟ for short), alleging that the accused persons had
siphoned-off an amount of Rs.18.88 crores from one M/s. Ligare
Aviation Limited („Ligare Aviation‟ for short) in 2014-15 on the basis
of fake/fictitious invoices.
3. The complainant company is stated to be aggrieved since it is an
indirect shareholder in Ligare Aviation, in that the complainant
company statedly holds 50% shares in RHC Holding Pvt. Ltd., which
in turn holds a 30% stake in Ligare Aviation. Further, RHC Holding
Pvt. Ltd. also holds 67.27% in RHC Finance Pvt. Ltd., which in turn
holds the rest 70% in Ligare Aviation.
4. The petitioner, who is admittedly a resident of Dubai, arrived in India
on 02.04.2022, when he was intimated by the immigration authorities
about a look-out-circular issued against him. The petitioner was
summonsed by the ED on 05.04.2022 to join investigation. He joined
investigation on 07.04.2022. The petitioner was subsequently arrested
by the investigating agency on 03.08.2022 from his residence in
Mumbai.
5. The petitioner had previously filed a petition seeking bail before the
learned trial court, which came to be dismissed on 31.08.2022.
Thereafter, the petitioner filed a petition bearing Bail Application No.
2658/2022 before this court, which was withdrawn by the petitioner
vide order dated 13.10.2022 with liberty to file for the same relief
before the learned ASJ, Patiala House Courts, New Delhi since the
respondent had filed the prosecution complaint before that court on
01.10.2022. A second bail application filed before the learned ASJ
was also dismissed on 26.11.2022.
Brief Facts
6. A brief conspectus of the facts and allegations leading-up to the filing
of the present bail petition is as follows :
6.1. As per the FIR, the accused persons hatched a conspiracy “to
cheat the complainant company” by siphoning-off funds from
the bank accounts of Ligare Aviation, causing a loss to the tune
of Rs.18.88 crores to the complainant company.
6.2. The FIR was registered against 16 individuals and companies,
inter-alia against one Sanjay Godhwani (former Managing
Director of Ligare Aviation) and his close associate Sunil
Godhwani, and a company by name M/s. Phoenix International
FZC („Phoenix FZC‟ for short), with which company, the
petitioner is alleged to be connected.
6.3. The petitioner however, was not named as an accused in the
FIR.
6.4. Sections 467, 471 and 120B IPC mentioned in the FIR are
offences under Part-A of the Schedule to the PMLA; and
accordingly, ECIR bearing No. ECIR/DLZO-II/35/2020/721
was registered on 24.09.2020, which culminated in the filing of
prosecution complaint dated 01.10.2022.
6.5. The petitioner was also not named as an accused in the ECIR;
but stands accused in the prosecution complaint as Accused No.5.
6.6. The allegation against the petitioner in the present case is in
relation to his role in Phoenix FZC, which company was
incorporated on 08.04.2013 with three Directors and
Shareholders, viz. Rajesh Bhatia, Kunal Desai and
Sandeepkumar Vipinchandra Maniar having 25%, 50% and
25% equity shareholding respectively. The substratum of the
allegation is that the petitioner exercised ultimate control over
Phoenix FZC, in which company his wife, Darshana Manglani,
was appointed as the General Manager. It is further the
allegation that subsequently, Darshana Manglani became the
owner of Phoenix FZC, whereupon the company became M/s.
Phoenix International FZE („Phoenix FZE‟ for short).
6.7. Shorn of unnecessary detail, based on its investigation, the ED
has alleged the following against Phoenix FZC; and it is alleged
in the prosecution complaint that since the petitioner exercised
ultimate control over Phoenix FZC, he is implicated in the
offending transactions that are subject matter of the complaint:
“21.6 Phoenix International FZC: It is established that M/s
Phoenix International FZC had assisted and conduit for
laundering USD 1.3 million. It transferred USD 1.3 million to
Eximius Business Middle East FZC which ultimately vested with
Sanjay Godhwani and Sandeep Bhatt. It siphoned off money to the
tune of Rs.1.85 million USD which was derived out of the criminal
activities relating to scheduled offence and assisted in projecting it
as untainted on the strength of fictitious invoices knowingly fully
well that they neither had the capability nor did they supply such
product/services. Therefore, M/s Phoenix International is involved
in assisting and utilization of proceeds of crime generated out of
criminal activity and its projection as untainted property, thereby
has committed the offence of money laundering as defined under
Section 3 (of Income Tax Act, 1961) of the PMLA,2002 and the accused Phoenix
International is liable to be prosecuted and punished under
Section 4 (of Income Tax Act, 1961) read with Section 70 (of Income Tax Act, 1961) and attached property, if
any, involved in the money laundering are liable to be confiscated
in terms of Section 8(5) (of Income Tax Act, 1961) of the PMLA,2002.‖
(emphasis in original)
The Allegedly Offending Transactions
7. The allegations against the petitioner in the prosecution complaint are
founded on certain allegedly offending transactions, which may be
summarised as follows :
7.1. On 04.12.2014 an amount of USD 954,751.79 was received by
Phoenix FZC from one M/s. Metal and Steel Solutions FZC.
The money was received against an invoice bearing No.
PHX/001/2014-15 dated 03.12.2014 raised towards ―Supply of
Spares and Equipment for HS – 125‖ for the amount of USD
960,000.00.
7.2. On 24/25.12.2014, an amount of USD 599,995.00 was received
by Phoenix FZC from Ligare Aviation against an Invoice
bearing No. Phoenix/001/2014 dated 22.12.2014 towards ―slot
co-ordination and Easy II kit procurement for Falcon 7X Easy
2 Registration No. VT-RGX‖ for the amount of USD 600,000.00.
7.3. On 13.01.2015, an amount of USD 299,995.00 was received by
Phoenix FZC from one M/s. Eximius Business Aviation Pvt.
Ltd., against which no invoice has been recovered.
7.4. Subsequently, a sum of USD 1,300,000.00 was transferred by
Phoenix FZC to M/s. Eximius Business Middle East FZC in the
following three tranches:
i. On 11.01.2015, an amount of USD 300,000.00 was
transferred, against which no invoice has been recovered;
ii. On 14.01.2015, an amount of USD 500,000.00 was
transferred against an invoice dated 12.01.2015 for USD
500,000.00 towards Management Fees For Consultancy
Services Provided‖; and
iii. On 19.01.2015, USD 500,000.00 was transferred against
an invoice dated 14.01.2015 for USD 500,000.00 towards
Management Fees For Consultancy Services Provided‖
7.5. The allegedly offending transactions are summarised in a table
at page 84 of the prosecution complaint, which reads as
follows:
Role Ascribed to the Petitioner
8. The role ascribed to the petitioner in the prosecution complaint is
extracted below :
“21.1. Ramesh Manglani:
Investigation so far has established that the accused Ramesh
Manglani has complete control over Phoenix International FZC and
was handling all the financial transactions and banking
transactions as Power of Attorney. He was instrumental in
executing the fraudulent transactions by way of fake and false
invoices and submitting the same to banks.
Various transactions have taken place in the bank account of
Phoenix International FZC against services of repair and
maintenance and supply of materials/equipment/spares for any
aircraft which is not in line with the business activity of Phoenix
International FZC which he knowingly entered into despite being
completely aware that he was neither a vendor nor equipped and
entitled to carry such services. Thus, he actively assisted and
knowingly aided in being a partner in siphoning off money from
Ligare Group of companies.
He feigned ignorance of the transactions and deliberately tried to
cover the identity of the individuals involved and thus delayed the
investigation and concealed the nature of transactions carried out
by Sanjay Godhwani and his close associates.
Further, it has been established that Ramesh Manglani not only
received proceeds of crime generated by Sanjay Godhwani and his
close associates out of criminal activities into his company‘s bank
account but also allowed his company‘s bank accounts to be used
for money laundering activities by Sanjay Godhwani and his close
associates. Therefore, Ramesh Manglani has knowingly assisted in
acquisition, possession, concealment, use of Proceeds of Crime
and projected the proceeds of crime as untainted thereby, Ramesh
Manglani has committed the offence of money laundering under
section of PMLA, 2002 punishable under section 4 (of Income Tax Act, 1961) of the said
Act.‖
(emphasis supplied)
9. The court has heard Mr. Siddharth Aggarwal, learned senior counsel
appearing for the petitioner and Mr. Zoheb Hossain, learned counsel
for the ED at length.
Submissions on behalf of the Petitioner
10. The main thrust of the petitioner's submission is that the petitioner
exercised no control over the affairs of Phoenix FZC; and that he was
neither an employee, nor did he hold any key position in the
management of the company. Moreover, it is contended that the
petitioner had no knowledge as regards the nature of the transactions
and was only functioning as an „Authorised Signatory‟ to operate the
bank account of Phoenix FZC, and was acting on instructions
received from Sahil Mehta and Sohan Mehta, who were his family
friends.
11. To substantiate this submission, attention has been drawn to the
structure of Phoenix FZC, which was incorporated in the UAE on
08.04.2013 as a Free Zone Company (FZC) by Sahil Mehta and
Sohan Mehta, who are the owners of the Sovika Group along with
three de-jure directors and shareholders, viz. Rajesh Bhatia, Kunal
Desai and Sandeepkumar Vipinchandra Maniar, who (latter) are stated
to have had prior connection with Sahil Mehta/Sovika Group. It is
argued, that Sahil Mehta closely managed the affairs of Phoenix FZC.
12. It is further submitted that the petitioner‟s wife was appointed as the
General Manager of Phoenix FZC at the time of establishing the
company, since a „resident‟ of the UAE is required for purposes of
setting-up a company in that country. The petitioner was only
appointed as the Authorised Signatory for managing the banking
operations of Phoenix FZC as he was residing in the UAE. However,
it is argued that the petitioner was never involved in the affairs of
Phoenix FZC, other than executing banking transactions through its
bank account on instructions of the persons mentioned above.
13. It is also submitted that the petitioner‟s wife was not the owner of the
company - Phoenix FZC - at the time when the allegedly offending
transactions took place, and she only became the owner on
17.02.2015, whereupon the company became Phoenix FZE.
14. It is further pointed-out that it is not the ED‟s case that the petitioner was in possession of any „proceeds of crime‟. The offending
transactions took place between December 2014 and January 2015;
and the petitioner was only involved to the limited extent of executing
banking transactions through the company‟s bank account, acting as
its Authorised Signatory.
15. With respect to the first allegedly offending transaction whereby an
amount of USD 599,995.00 was paid by Ligare Aviation to Phoenix
FZC, which transaction was made on the basis of a statedly false
Invoice bearing No. Phoenix/001/2014 dated 22.12.2014, the
petitioner submits that the said invoice was never issued by the
petitioner but by Sahil Mehta.
16. In support of the above, attention is drawn to the petitioner‟s
statements dated 07.04.2022 and 19.05.2022 recorded by the ED
under section 50 (of Income Tax Act, 1961) of the PMLA, in which the petitioner has frankly
stated that the said invoice was false. It is submitted that in fact, the
ED only came to know that the invoice was bogus and false by reason
of statement dated 07.04.2022 made by the petitioner before the
investigating agency. Furthermore, attention is drawn to Sahil Mehta‟s
statement dated 28.06.2022, wherein he has clearly said that the
invoice in question was prepared by Sandeep Bhatt and Sanjay
Godhwani and the invoice was sent by him to the petitioner under
instructions of the aforementioned two persons. More importantly,
Sahil Mehta has also admitted that his signature, as appearing on the
invoice, was forged by Sanjay Godhwani or Sandeep Bhatt. It is thus
the submission, that evidently, the petitioner was not the person who
prepared the said bogus invoice; and that Sahil Mehta was the person
who was managing the transactions of Phoenix FZC.
17. Additionally, the petitioner buttresses the aforesaid submission by
placing on record orders dated 10.11.2022 and 14.11.2022 made by
the learned ASJ, wherein the court records that when it queried the
I.O. as to who signed the questioned invoices, the I.O. stated that ―he
does not know the name of who signed the invoices‖.
18. Apropos the second allegedly offending transaction stated to have
been carried-out on the basis of Invoice No. PHX/001/2014-15 dated
03.12.2014, pursuant to which the amount of USD 954,751.79 was
transferred from M/s. Metal and Steel Solutions FZC to Phoenix FZC,
it is submitted that this invoice was also issued on instructions of
Sahil Mehta and that the petitioner was not involved in issuing the
same.
19. In this regard, attention is drawn to e-mail dated 01.12.2014, by which
Sahil Mehta had asked one Iqlaque Khan to get M/s. Metal and Steel
Solutions FZC to transfer USD 300,000.00 to one M/s. Tumas Group
Finance Company Limited and USD 960,000.00 to Phoenix FZC on
an urgent basis. Attention is further drawn to statements dated
15.06.2022, 16.06.2022 and 13.09.2022 made by Sunil Mangelal
Aggarwal (who was a director of M/s. Metal and Steel Solutions
FZC), wherein he has unequivocally confirmed that he transferred the
sum of USD 960,000.00 to Phoenix FZC on instructions of Iqlaque
Khan and against an invoice received from him; which was the
invoice earlier received from Sahil Mehta. It is argued that this shows
that the petitioner had no role to play in the issuance of that invoice.
Moreover, it is submitted, that the said transaction was a local
transaction within the UAE, as both the entities involved are based in
Dubai. Also, it is contended that the transaction has no relevance to
the amounts received by Phoenix FZC from Ligare Aviation, since it
is between M/s. Metal and Steel Solutions and Phoenix FZC.
20. It is also pointed-out that in statement dated 12.09.2022 made by
Sanjay Godhwani, he categorically states that Sandeep Bhatt was the
person co-ordinating the transactions between Ligare Aviation, M/s.
Metal and Steel Solution FZC and Phoenix FZC.
21. The third allegedly offending transaction is the receipt of USD
300,000.00 by Phoenix FZC from M/s. Exemius Business Aviation
Ltd. and payment of USD 1,300,000.00 by Phoenix FZC in three
tranches of USD 300,000.00, USD 500,000.00 and USD 500,000.00
to M/s. Exemius Business Middle East FZC. It is submitted that all
these transactions were done by the petitioner on instructions of Sahil
Mehta. To support this submission, the petitioner has placed reliance
on e-mails dated 09.01.2015, 14.01.2015 and 16.01.2105 sent by
Sahil Mehta to the petitioner, from which it is seen that Sahil Mehta
had instructed the petitioner to carry-out the abovementioned outward
transactions.
22. Pertinently, is submitted that no invoice has been recovered for the
inward transaction of USD 300,000.00 from M/s. Eximius Business
Aviation Ltd.
23. It is also pointed-out that in reply to e-mail dated 09.01.2015 received
from Sahil Mehta, instructing the petitioner to transfer the sum of
USD 300,000.00, the petitioner had queried Sahil Mehta as to the
purpose of the transfer, to which query however, the petitioner did not
receive a response; and yet, the petitioner went ahead and made the
transaction in any case. The submission is that this clearly shows that
the petitioner was acting merely as an Authorised Signatory for
Phoenix FZC and had no personal interest, in or control over, the
transactions.
24. Furthermore, by e-mail dated 22.01.2015 sent by Sahil Mehta, he
asked the petitioner to send the bank account statement of Phoenix
FZC for the last 03 months, indicating the transactions made and
approximate balance available in the bank account, which again
shows that it was Sahil Mehta and not the petitioner who exercised
control over Phoenix FZC.
25. Attention is also drawn to statements dated 09.08.2022, 15.09.2022
and 21.09.2022 made by Sahil Mehta stating that the above
transactions were effectuated at the behest of Sandeep Bhatt and
Sanjay Godhwani who had sought to transfer the amounts first to a
local company in the UAE viz. Phoenix FZC; and once funds were
received by Phoenix FZC, he further instructed the petitioner to make
outward transfers; again upon instructions of the same persons viz.
Sandeep Bhatt and Sanjay Godhwani.
26. Senior counsel submits that even before the questioned transactions
were carried-out by the petitioner on instructions of other persons,
ever since the institution of Phoenix FZC, from November 2013 till
November 2014, regular instructions were issued to the petitioner
inter-alia by the erstwhile directors and by Sahil Mehta to make
transfers to various third parties on the basis of invoices shared by
them.
27. Importantly, it is pointed-out that as per statements dated 04.08.2022
and 21.09.2022 made by Sahil Mehta, he has clearly stated that he had
no knowledge as regards the real intentions and motives behind the
incriminating transactions; and therefore, knowledge of the true
nature of the transactions cannot possibly be imputed to the petitioner.
28. It is submitted that Sahil Mehta‟s statements dated 28.06.2022 and
27.06.2022 bear-out the fact that the co-accused persons did not even
know who the petitioner was, since in those statements Sahil Mehta
admits that the petitioner was never in contact with Ligare Aviation
and all communications were always facilitated through him i.e.
through Sahil Mehta.
29. It is urged that the petitioner did not issue any of the invoices, and the petitioner had neither any knowledge nor control over the inward
remittances, until the amounts were actually received.
30. To make good their submission that if mens rea is not established by
the prosecuting agency, the petitioner ought to be released on bail,
learned senior counsel has drawn the attention of this court to the para
388 of the seminal decision of the Supreme Court in Vijay Madanlal
Choudhary & Ors. vs. Union of India and Ors., which has been
extracted below.
31. Senior counsel has also placed reliance on the recent judgment of the
Supreme Court in Mohd. Muslim alias Hussain vs. State (NCT of
Delhi), to elaborate the role of the court at the time of considering a
bail petition when „twin-conditions‟ under a special statute apply. It is
argued that the court must not interpret the twin-conditions in a way
that would altogether exclude the option of granting bail. It is
submitted that this court is required to view the material on record in a
broad manner‖ and .reasonably see whether the accused‘s guilt
may be proved.‖
32. It is vehemently argued by senior counsel for the petitioner that other
similarly placed persons who were involved in similar transactions
have not even been made accused, and in any case have not been
arrested by the ED. For instance, the owner of M/s. Metal and Steel
Solutions, Sunil Mangelal Aggarwal, has not been made an accused
but has only been cited as a witness, though M/s. Metal and Steel
Solutions had received USD 1,300,000.00 from Ligare Aviation
against an invoice that has been found not to be genuine by the
investigating agency. Furthermore, Sunil Mangelal Aggarwal has
admitted in his statement that services mentioned in the invoice were
not provided and that he actually helped in discounting
LC/transferring money for a commission. Even Sahil Mehta, who was
the only point-of-contact between the petitioner and other accused
persons has not been named as an accused but has instead been cited
only as a witness.
33. On the conduct of the ED not arresting similarly placed persons, or
others involved with the offence, senior counsel has drawn the
attention of this court to the judgment of the Supreme Court in State
of Madhya Pradesh vs. Sheetla Sahai and Ors.to submit that the
investigating agency cannot arbitrarily choose persons against whom
it wishes to proceed. It is stated that such exercise of power amounts
to the investigating agency arrogating to itself the court‟s powers
under sections 306 (of Income Tax Act, 1961) and 307 CrPC. Attention has specifically been
drawn to the following observations in this judgment :
49. It is also interesting to notice that the prosecution had
proceeded against the officials in a pick-and-choose manner. We
may notice the following statements made in the counter-affidavit
which had not been denied or disputed to show that not only those
accused who were in office for a very short time but also those who
had retired long back before the file was moved for the purpose of
obtaining clearance for payment of additional amount from the
Government viz. M.N. Nadkarni who worked as Chief Engineer till
24-3-1987 and S.W. Mohogaonkar, Superintending Engineer who
worked till 19-6-1989 have been made accused but, on the other
hand, those who were one way or the other connected with the
decision viz. Shri J.R. Malhotra and Mr R.D. Nanhoria have not
been proceeded at all. We fail to understand on what basis such a
discrimination was made.
50. In Soma Chakravarty [(2007) 5 SCC 403 : (2007) 2 SCC (Cri)
514], whereupon strong reliance has been placed by Mr Tulsi, this
Court opined: (SCC p. 411, para 23)
23. In a case of this nature, the learned Special Judge also
should have considered the question having regard to the
doctrine of parity‘ in mind. An accused similarly situated
has not been proceeded against only because, the
departmental proceedings ended in his favour. Whether an
accused before him although stands on a similar footing
despite he having not been departmentally proceeded against
or had not been completely exonerated also required to be
considered. If exoneration in a departmental proceeding is
the basis for not framing a charge against an accused person
who is said to be similarly situated, the question which
requires a further consideration was as to whether the
applicant before it was similarly situated or not and/or
whether the exonerated officer in the departmental
proceeding also faced same charges including the charge of
being a party to the larger conspiracy.‖
(emphasis supplied)
34. Senior counsel has also relied upon the judgments of Co-ordinate
Benches of this court in Dr. Bindu Rana vs. Serious Fraud
Investigation Office and Chandra Prakash Khandelwal vs.
Directorate of Enforcement to point-out that the non-arrest of
similarly placed co-accused persons has weighed with the court which
granted bail to the petitioner in those cases.
Submissions on behalf of the ED
35. Opposing grant of bail, Mr. Zoheb Hossain, learned counsel appearing
for the respondent/Enforcement Directorate argues, first and foremost,
that the present petition, being one that arises from scheduled offences
under the PMLA, is required to be considered by this court strictly in
terms of the twin-conditions contained in section 45 (of Income Tax Act, 1961) of that statute.
Attention in this behalf is drawn to judgments of the Supreme Court
in Vijay Madanlal (supra), The Directorate of Enforcement vs. M
Gopal Reddy and Anr., Union of India vs. Varinder Singh alias
Raja and Anr., Union of India vs. Rattan Mallik, as also judgments
of this Court in Bimal Kumar Jain and Anr. vs. Directorate of
Enforcement, Gautam Thapar vs. Directorate of Enforcement,
Christian Michel James vs. Directorate of Enforcement, Sajjan
Kumar vs. Directorate of Enforcement12 and Raj Singh Gehlot vs.
Directorate of Enforcement.
36. In particular, Mr. Hossain relies on Vijay Madanlal14 (supra) to argue
that the scope of section 3 (of Income Tax Act, 1961) of the PMLA is wide and far-reaching such
that every process and activity in dealing with the proceeds of
crime, directly or indirectly, and not limited to the happening of the
final act of integration of tainted property in formal economy
would constitute the act of money laundering. It is thus submitted that
there are reasonable grounds to believe that the petitioner is guilty of
the offence under section 3 (of Income Tax Act, 1961) for the reasons stated hereunder.
37. It is argued that though Phoenix FZC was incorporated in the UAE
with Rajesh Bhatia, Kunal Desai and Sandeepkumar Vipinchandra
Maniar as its Directors and Shareholders, the petitioner was given the
mandate to run banking operations of Phoenix FZC; and his wife,
Darshana Manglani, was the General Manager of the company. It is
submitted that thereby, the petitioner exercised ultimate control over
the company Phoenix FZC and is a „beneficial owner‟ in terms of
Section 2(fa) (of Income Tax Act, 1961) of the PMLA.
38. The ED submits that the offending transaction of USD 600,000.00
took place on the basis of a fake invoice dated 22.12.2014 raised by
Phoenix FZC allegedly for aircraft maintenance services but
investigation has revealed that there existed no formal agreement
between Ligare Aviation and Phoenix FZC for providing any services
for which the invoice was raised. In fact, it is pointed-out that Ligare
Aviation already had an agreement in place with one Dassault
Aviation for all scheduled and unscheduled maintenance relating to
the aircraft.
39. Furthermore, as per the log-book maintained for this aircraft, there is
no reference to Phoenix FZC having provided any services for its
repair and maintenance. Moreover, even Ligare Aviation‟s software,
Flypal, wherein the company would keep track of all their invoices
had no record of any invoice having been raised by Phoenix FZC
upon Ligare Aviation. It is thus submitted that no services or goods
were supplied by Phoenix FZC to Ligare Aviation against Invoice
dated 22.12.2014 for USD 600,000.00.
40. Similarly, the ED argues that no services or goods were supplied by
Phoenix FZC to M/s. Metal & Steel Solution FZC against Invoice No.
Phoenix/001/2014-15 dated 03.12.2014 for USD 960,000.00.
41. It is further alleged that there exists no invoice and no goods or
services were provided by Phoenix FZC against the payment of USD
299,995.00 made to it by M/s. Eximius Business Aviation Ltd.
Moreover, Phoenix FZC has made payments of USD 1,300,000.00 to
Eximius Business Middle East FZC against two invoices of USD
500,000.00 each, while no invoice has been issued for the transaction
of USD 300,000.00. It is argued that these transactions have been
carried-out by the petitioner, as is evident from the e-mails exchanged
between the petitioner and other third parties. These amounts have
been routed from Ligare Aviation to M/s. Eximius Business Middle
East FZC (incorporated by Sanjay Godhwani and Sandeep Bhatt) via
M/s. Phoenix FZC; and the petitioner‟s role in effectuating these
transactions falls within the wide definition of the offence of money
laundering under section 3 (of Income Tax Act, 1961) of the PMLA.
42. In fact, the ED argues, that Sahil Mehta was a mere messenger looped
in to relay information from Sanjay Godhwani and Sandeep Bhatt to
the petitioner.
43. It is the ED‟s submission that since the petitioner was given the
mandate to manage the bank account of Phoenix FZC, he was
involved in the day-to-day operations of the company, and was aware
that money was being transferred to third parties (companies) for the
benefit of co-accused Sanjay Godhwani and Sandeep Bhatt.
44. Furthermore, counsel argues that to test whether the accused was
possessed of the requisite mens rea for commission of the offence
under section 3 (of Income Tax Act, 1961) of the PMLA, the court may consider the following
bundle of facts of the present case, which establish mens rea:
44.1. The petitioner is not an employee of Phoenix FZC. There exists
no Board Resolution appointing him as an Authorized
Signatory of Phoenix FZC or to authorize the payments made
from, or received by him, into the bank account that company;
44.2. Since the inception of Phoenix FZC on 08.04.2013, Darshana
Manglani has been the „Person-in-Charge‟ of the company
being its „General Manager‟;
44.3. The petitioner‟s close involvement with Phoenix FZC is
evident from the fact that on 19.12.2014 he was made the
power of attorney holder on behalf of the three directors to
transfer shares in Phoenix FZC to his wife, Darshana Manglani.
Counsel has drawn attention to a letter dated 02.09.2013 issued
by the three erstwhile directors of the company to Fujairah Free
Zone Authority in this behalf;
44.4. It is evident from the e-mail exchanges between the petitioner
and Sahil Mehta that he was not a mere „Yes-Man‟ to Sahil
Mehta but was in fact in the know of the nature of the
transactions that he was being instructed to make. For instance,
in relation to an e-mail dated 09.04.2022 sent by Sahil Mehta
instructing him to transfer money, the petitioner enquired about
the purpose of the said transaction.
44.5. In any case, the ED argues, the fact that the petitioner was
taking instructions from Sahil Mehta, who is an alien to the
company, is in itself an inexplicable circumstance which
indicates that the petitioner ought to have known of the nature
of transactions.
44.6. It is also submitted that the petitioner‟s role in Phoenix FZC is
also evident from his statement dated 19.05.2023 made under
section 50 (of Income Tax Act, 1961) of the PMLA, wherein he accepts that he helped his
wife, Darshana Manglani in “...Opening a company in the
name of Phoenix International FZC in which she was 100%
shareholder...‖. Attention in this behalf is also drawn to the
statement dated 07.04.2022 made by Darshana Manglani, who
has also made a statement to the same effect.
45. Insofar as the question of why other persons have either not been
made accused or have not been arrested, it is submitted that it is the
„right‟ of the prosecution to decide who it prosecutes. It can decline to
array a person as accused and instead examine them as a witness for
the prosecution. The considerations to make a person an accused are
at the discretion of the investigating agency; and the non-arrest or
non-prosecution of others cannot form the basis for grant of regular
bail to an arrested accused.
46. In this behalf, counsel also argues that clause (ii) of the Explanation to section 44 (of Income Tax Act, 1961) of the PMLA is a provision enabling further investigation
against any accused, whether named in the complaint or not. The
investigating agency relies on Vijay Madanlal 15 (supra) and Tahir
Hussain vs. Assistant Directorate of Enforcement16 to submit that a
„complaint‟ is deemed to include any subsequent „complaint‟ in
respect of which further investigation may be conducted. It is thus
argued, that it is the prerogative of the investigating agency to file an
additional complaint against any person who may not have been made
an „accused‟in the „complaint‟ previously filed.
47. The ED also seeks to draw attention to the petitioner‟s conduct,
alleging that the petitioner has attempted to mislead and derail the
investigation firstly, by not cooperating and making false medical
excuses so as not to be available for investigation; secondly, by
feigning ignorance as regards Phoenix FZC and its affairs; and thirdly,
by asking his son to delete e-mails concerning transactions with
Phoenix FZC from his e-mail ID ramesh1994@yahoo.com and
forwarding the same to another e-mail ID mainjhukekanahi@gmail.com. It is submitted that this shows the petitioner‟s guilty mind and also that the petitioner is likely to tamper with the evidence if granted bail.
Rejoinder Submissions on behalf of the Petitioner
48. In rejoinder to the submissions, the petitioner has offered the
following responses :
48.1. As regards the allegation that the petitioner was taking
instructions from Sahil Mehta who was an „alien‟ to Phoenix
FZC, the petitioner submits that this is factually incorrect and
misleading. The petitioner has placed on record several e-mails
exchanged in relation to the allegedly offending transactions to
show that the de jure owners of the company were involved in
the transactions; and moreover, there are several e-mails even
in the „relied upon documents‟ on which at least one of the de
jure owners was marked/copied.
48.2. It is contended that the petitioner cannot be termed as the
„beneficial owner‟ under the PMLA, since all documents and
correspondence only show that the petitioner was simply taking
instructions in relation to operating the bank account of the
company; and at no point was the petitioner involved in
running the affairs of the company. Additionally, it is submitted
that the ED‟s argument that the petitioner is the „beneficial
owner‟ but at the same time was taking instructions from an
„alien‟ to the company, are mutually contradictory. If the
petitioner were to be the beneficial owner, then he would not
have been receiving instructions from someone outside the
company.
48.3. On the submission that Phoenix FZC was only a conduit for
money laundering, it is submitted that this submission is false
and that the company regularly carried-out several other
business activities as is evident from the various documents,
including company correspondence, which show that business
activities were being carried-on by Phoenix FZC with several
third parties including Nexus India, Nexus Saudi, RAK Airport,
Casamia UAE, Jet Aviation Dubai LLC etc.
49. To show the lack of mens rea, it is reiterated that the petitioner did not knowingly‟ assist in any activity connected with the alleged proceeds
of crime. It is argued that the investigating agency has failed to show
any correspondence to establish that the co-accused persons even
knew the petitioner. It is pointed-out that admittedly, the petitioner
was not in direct contact with any of the co-accused and the
instructions were issued only through Sahil Mehta. Moreover, it is
submitted that the petitioner had no obligation to verify whether any
services were extended by the company in consideration of the
payments being received. Such obligation is not imposed by any law
and the petitioner was only processing payments as directed.
Discussion and Conclusions
50. In the prosecution complaint, the allegation against the petitioner is
under section 3 (of Income Tax Act, 1961) of the PMLA, which provision is reproduced below
for ease of reference:
3. Offence of money-laundering.—Whosoever directly or indirectly
attempts to indulge or knowingly assists or knowingly is a party or
is actually involved in any process or activity connected with
the proceeds of crime including its concealment, possession,
acquisition or use and projecting or claiming it as untainted
property shall be guilty of offence of money-laundering.
Explanation.—For the removal of doubts, it is hereby clarified
that,—
(i) a person shall be guilty of offence of money-laundering if such person
is found to have directly or indirectly attempted to indulge or knowingly
assisted or knowingly is a party or is actually involved in one or more of
the following processes or activities connected with proceeds of crime,
namely—
(a) concealment; or
(b) possession; or
(c) acquisition; or
(d) use; or
(e) projecting as untainted property; or
(f) claiming as untainted property,in any manner whatsoever;
(ii) the process or activity connected with proceeds of crime is a continuing activity and continues till such time a person is directly or indirectly enjoying the proceeds of crime by its concealment or possession or acquisition or use or projecting it as untainted property or claiming it as untainted property in any manner whatsoever.
51. It cannot be gainsaid that the offence comprised in section 3 (of Income Tax Act, 1961) of the
PMLA is a grave and serious economic offence, and has been couched
in the widest of terms. However, before proceeding to consider the
rival submissions of the parties, it is necessary to briefly set-out the
position of law as enunciated by the Supreme Court as regards the
considerations that must inform the grant or denial of bail in matters
under the PMLA. The principles have been succinctly captured in the
below-noted three decisions of the Supreme Court relating to PMLA
and analogously worded statutory provisions, the relevant portions
whereof have been extracted :
51.1. Ranjitsing Brahmajeetsing Sharma vs. State of Maharashtra
and Anr.
44. The wording of Section 21(4) (of Income Tax Act, 1961), in our opinion, does not
lead to the conclusion that the court must arrive at a positive
finding that the applicant for bail has not committed an
offence under the Act. If such a construction is placed, the
court intending to grant bail must arrive at a finding that the
applicant has not committed such an offence. In such an
event, it will be impossible for the prosecution to obtain a
judgment of conviction of the applicant. Such cannot be the
intention of the legislature. Section 21(4) (of Income Tax Act, 1961) of MCOCA,
therefore, must be construed reasonably. It must be so
construed that the court is able to maintain a delicate
balance between a judgment of acquittal and conviction and
an order granting bail much before commencement of trial.
Similarly, the court will be required to record a finding as to
the possibility of his committing a crime after grant of bail.
However, such an offence in futuro must be an offence under
the Act and not any other offence. Since it is difficult to
predict the future conduct of an accused, the court must
necessarily consider this aspect of the matter having regard
to the antecedents of the accused, his propensities and the
nature and manner in which he is alleged to have committed
the offence.
45. It is, furthermore, trite that for the purpose of
considering an application for grant of bail, although
detailed reasons are not necessary to be assigned, the order
granting bail must demonstrate application of mind at least
in serious cases as to why the applicant has been granted or
denied the privilege of bail.
46. The duty of the court at this stage is not to weigh the
evidence meticulously but to arrive at a finding on the basis
of broad probabilities. However, while dealing with a
special statute like MCOCA having regard to the provisions
contained in sub-section (4) of Section 21 (of Income Tax Act, 1961), the
court may have to probe into the matter deeper so as to
enable it to arrive at a finding that the materials collected
against the accused during the investigation may not justify
a judgment of conviction. The findings recorded by the
court while granting or refusing bail undoubtedly would be
tentative in nature, which may not have any bearing on the
merit of the case and the trial court would, thus, be free to
decide the case on the basis of evidence adduced at the
trial, without in any manner being prejudiced thereby.‖
(emphasis supplied)
51.2. Vijay Madanlal Choudhary and Ors. vs. Union of India and
Ors.
388. Notably, there are several other legislations where
such twin conditions have been provided for. Such twin
conditions in the concerned provisions have been tested from
time to time and have stood the challenge of the
constitutional validity thereof. The successive decisions of
this Court dealing with analogous provision have stated that
the Court at the stage of considering the application for
grant of bail, is expected to consider the question from the
angle as to whether the accused was possessed of the
requisite mens rea. The Court is not required to record a
positive finding that the accused had not committed an
offence under the Act. The Court ought to maintain a
delicate balance between a judgment of acquittal and
conviction and an order granting bail much before
commencement of trial. The duty of the Court at this stage
is not to weigh the evidence meticulously but to arrive at a
finding on the basis of broad probabilities. Further, the
Court is required to record a finding as to the possibility of
the accused committing a crime which is an offence under
the Act after grant of bail.
401. We are in agreement with the observation made by the
Court in Ranjitsing Brahmajeetsing Sharma. The Court
while dealing with the application for grant of bail need
not delve deep into the merits of the case and only a view of
the Court based on available material on record is
required. The Court will not weigh the evidence to find the
guilt of the accused which is, of course, the work of Trial
Court. The Court is only required to place its view based on
probability on the basis of reasonable material collected
during investigation and the said view will not be taken
into consideration by the Trial Court in recording its
finding of the guilt or acquittal during trial which is based
on the evidence adduced during the trial. As explained by
this Court in Nimmagadda Prasad, the words used in
Section 45 of the 2002 Act are ―reasonable grounds for
believing‖ which means the Court has to see only if there is
a genuine case against the accused and the prosecution is
not required to prove the charge beyond reasonable doubt.‖
(emphasis supplied)
51.3. Mohd. Muslim alias Hussain vs. State (NCT of Delhi)19
19. The conditions which courts have to be cognizant of are
that there are reasonable grounds for believing that the
accused is ―not guilty of such offence‖ and that he is not
likely to commit any offence while on bail. What is meant by
“not guilty” when all the evidence is not before the court ?
It can only be a prima facie determination. That places the
court's discretion within a very narrow margin. Given the
mandate of the general law on bails (Sections 436, 437 and
439, CrPC) which classify offences based on their gravity,
and instruct that certain serious crimes have to be dealt with
differently while considering bail applications, the
additional condition that the court should be satisfied that
the accused (who is in law presumed to be innocent) is not
guilty, has to be interpreted reasonably. Further the
classification of offences under Special Acts (NDPS Act,
etc.), which apply over and above the ordinary bail
conditions required to be assessed by courts, require that the
court records its satisfaction that the accused might not be
guilty of the offence and that upon release, they are not
likely to commit any offence. These two conditions have the
effect of overshadowing other conditions. In cases where
bail is sought, the court assesses the material on record such
as the nature of the offence, likelihood of the accused co-
operating with the investigation, not fleeing from justice :
even in serious offences like murder, kidnapping, rape, etc.
On the other hand, the court in these cases under such
special Acts, have to address itself principally on two facts:
likely guilt of the accused and the likelihood of them not
committing any offence upon release. This court has
generally upheld such conditions on the ground that liberty
of such citizens have to - in cases when accused of offences
enacted under special laws - be balanced against the public
interest.
20. A plain and literal interpretation of the conditions
under Section 37 (of Income Tax Act, 1961) (i.e., that Court should be satisfied that
the accused is not guilty and would not commit any
offence) would effectively exclude grant of bail altogether,
resulting in punitive detention and unsanctioned preventive
detention as well. Therefore, the only manner in which such
special conditions as enacted under Section 37 (of Income Tax Act, 1961) can be
considered within constitutional parameters is where the
court is reasonably satisfied on a prima facie look at the
material on record (whenever the bail application is made)
that the accused is not guilty. Any other interpretation,
would result in complete denial of the bail to a person
accused of offences such as those enacted under Section 37 (of Income Tax Act, 1961)
of the NDPS Act.
21. The standard to be considered therefore, is one, where
the court would look at the material in a broad manner,
and reasonably see whether the accused's guilt may be
proved. The judgments of this court have, therefore,
emphasized that the satisfaction which courts are expected
to record, i.e., that the accused may not be guilty, is only
prima facie, based on a reasonable reading, which does not
call for meticulous examination of the materials collected
during investigation (as held in Union of India v. Rattan
Malik). Grant of bail on ground of undue delay in trial,
cannot be said to be fettered by Section 37 (of Income Tax Act, 1961), given
the imperative of Section 436A (of Income Tax Act, 1961) which is applicable to
offences under the NDPS Act too (ref. Satender Kumar Antil
supra). Having regard to these factors the court is of the
opinion that in the facts of this case, the appellant deserves
to be enlarged on bail.
22. Before parting, it would be important to reflect that
laws which impose stringent conditions for grant of bail,
may be necessary in public interest; yet, if trials are not
concluded in time, the injustice wrecked on the individual is
immeasurable. Jails are overcrowded and their living
conditions, more often than not, appalling. According to the
Union Home Ministry's response to Parliament, the National
Crime Records Bureau had recorded that as on 31st
December 2021, over 5,54,034 prisoners were lodged in
jails against total capacity of 4,25,069 lakhs in the country.
Of these 122,852 were convicts; the rest 4,27,165 were
undertrials.‖
(emphasis supplied)
52. Furthermore, in its recent decision in Ashish Mittal vs. Serious Fraud
Investigation Office , in the context of section 212(6) (of Income Tax Act, 1961) of the
Companies Act, 2013 which contains a provision in pari materia to
section 45(1)(i) (of Income Tax Act, 1961) and (ii) of the PMLA, this court has held as under :
28. The above enunciation of the law clearly mandates that where
additional conditions are stipulated in a statute for grant of bail
relating to specified offences, it cannot be that the prosecution need
only recite from its complaint, or simply say that it has material
against the accused in respect of such offences. The prosecution
must show how the material collected during investigation supports
the allegations in the complaint, and most importantly, how the
allegations apply against the accused. To reiterate, the opposition
by the public prosecutor must be reasoned opposition, supported by
valid and relevant reasons. When the public prosecutor opposes a
bail plea, he would have to establish foundational facts sufficiently
to dislodge the presumption of innocence, and it is only then that the
onus of satisfying the stringent twin-conditions would shift onto the
accused. To be clear, there is no statutory mandate for the court to
depart from the presumption of innocence.
33. It is also important to articulate here, that though the general
principle is that parity with co-accused alone is not a ground to
claim bail as a matter of right; however, that principle is nuanced.
The nature of an offence may be such, that the fact that other
accused have been granted bail, may persuade the court to exercise
its discretion in favour of another co-accused in granting bail.‖
(emphasis supplied)
53. Upon a conspectus of the foregoing decisions, the principles for
application of the twin conditions for grant or denial of bail under
PMLA may be distilled and crystallised as under :
i. That while deciding a bail plea under the PMLA, the court need
not delve deep into the merits21 of the allegations or minutely
consider or assess the evidence collected by the investigating
agency;
ii. That the court is only to satisfy itself, on a prima-facie view of
the matter, based on broad probabilities22 discernible from the
material collected during investigation, whether or not there are
reasonable grounds for believing that the accused is not guilty
of the offence alleged. In doing so, the court would also
consider, in a similar manner, whether the accused was
possessed of the requisite mens rea in relation to the offence
alleged. The effort has to be to assess, again on a prima-facie
basis, if there is a genuine case against the accused
iii. That the court is also similarly to satisfy itself, whether or not
the accused is likely to commit any offence under the PMLA
while on bail; and since it is difficult to predict the future
conduct of an accused, the court must necessarily consider this
aspect of the matter having regard to the antecedents of the
accused, his propensities and the nature and manner in which
he is alleged to have committed the offence;
iv. That the court is not required to return a positive finding26 that
the accused has not committed an offence; and must therefore
maintain a delicate balance27 i.e. a clear distance between a
judgment of acquittal or conviction and an order granting or
denying bail; and
v. That since the assessment at the stage of granting or denying
bail would be tentative in nature, such assessment may not have
any bearing on the merits of the case; and the trial court
would be free to decide the case on the basis of evidence
adduced during trial, without in any manner being influenced
by the decision of the court granting or denying bail.
54. Needless to add, that the twin-conditions under section 45(1) (of Income Tax Act, 1961) of the
PMLA are to be applied in addition to the usual and ordinary
principles required to be considered for grant or denial of bail29
. These may very riefly be summarised in the words of the Supreme Court in
P. Chidambaram vs. CBI3:
21. The jurisdiction to grant bail has to be exercised on the basis
of the well-settled principles having regard to the facts and
circumstances of each case. The following factors are to be taken
into consideration while considering an application for bail:
(i) the nature of accusation and the severity of the punishment in
the case of conviction and the nature of the materials relied
upon by the prosecution;
(ii) reasonable apprehension of tampering with the witnesses or
apprehension of threat to the complainant or the witnesses;
(iii) reasonable possibility of securing the presence of the
accused at the time of trial or the likelihood of his abscondence;
(iv) character, behaviour and standing of the accused and the
circumstances which are peculiar to the accused;
(v) larger interest of the public or the State and similar other
considerations.
55. Upon a conspectus of the submissions made and based on the material
on record, prima-facie the following inferences may be drawn on
broad probabilities :
55.1. The allegedly offending transactions have been made through a
corporate entity called Phoenix FZC, which was in the business
of providing aviation related services. From 08.04.2013 to
17.02.2015 Phoenix FZC had three directors and shareholders,
viz. Rajesh Bhatia, Kunal Desai and Sandeepkumar Vipinchandra Maniar. The petitioner was neither a director nor a shareholder in the company. In fact, from the record it appears that the three shareholders of Phoenix FZC were employees of Sahil Mehta or were otherwise associated with him. As such,
Sahil Mehta was not an „alien‟to Phoenix FZC.
55.2. The petitioner was a resident of Dubai, UAE; and, it is common
ground, that the petitioner was appointed as the Authorised
Signatory to operate the bank account of Phoenix FZC. No
document evidencing his appointment as such is on record.
However, neither the petitioner nor the ED dispute that he was
so appointed.
55.3. On or about 17.02.2015, the three directors/shareholders of
Phoenix FZC resigned from their positions and transferred their
shares in the company to the petitioner‟s wife, Darshana
Manglani, who became the owner of the company, which now
came to be known as Phoenix International FZE. To effectuate
the transfer of shareholding of Phoenix FZC to Darshana
Manglani, the petitioner was appointed as a power of attorney
holder vide Power of Attorney dated 19.12.2014 by the three
directors. After the company changed from Phoenix
International FZC to Phoenix International FZE and Darshana
Manglani became its owner, no offending transaction has been
alleged.
55.4. The allegedly offending transactions were all conducted during
the period when the three aforementioned persons were
directors/shareholders of Phoenix FZC. Of these transactions,
03 were inward remittances, and there were 03 outward
remittances to the same company. These transactions are
summarised in a table appearing at page 84 of the prosecution
complaint, as extracted hereinbefore.
55.5. As is seen from the table, the 03 inward remittances happened
on 04.12.2014, 24.12.2014 and 13.01.2015. Since for an inward
remittance, no action is required on the part of the
beneficiary/recipient company, the petitioner had no role to play
in such transactions, even though he was the Authorised
Signatory for the bank account of the company at that time. It is
noteworthy that at the stage the inward remittances were
received into Phoenix FZC, the petitioner was neither
director/shareholder nor did he have any financial interest in the
affairs of the company. Same was the position at the time when
outward remittances were made from the company.
55.6. It is seen from the record that the petitioner was not involved in
issuance of the invoice against which the inward remittance of
USD 599,995.00 was received by Phoenix FZC, since when
shown invoice dated 22.12.2014, in his statement dated
28.07.2022 Sahil Mehta categorically states that “...it is a copy
of my signature and which has been signed by either Sanjay
Godhwani or Sandeep Bhat.‖ It is clear therefore that it was not
the petitioner who had signed the invoice. Furthermore, in his
statement dated 21.09.2022, Sahil Mehta also states that the
above transaction was facilitated on instructions from Sanjay
Godhwani and Sandeep Bhatt.
55.7. As regards the transaction of USD 954,751.79, as can be seen
from e-mail dated 01.12.2014 sent by Sahil Mehta to Iqlaque
Khan, the former issued the direction to effectuate the transfer.
Furthermore, the invoice for USD 960,000.00 can be traced
back to one Mahesh Bisht (of Sovika Group) who had shared it
with Iqlaque Khan. These communications go to show that the
petitioner was nowhere involved in the issuance of these
invoices and can in no way be made accountable for the
remittances received pursuant thereto in the bank account of
Phoenix FZC.
55.8. Furthermore, as has been pointed-out, the learned ASJ recorded
in order dated 14.11.2022 that when he questioned the I.O. as to
whose signatures appeared on invoice dated 03.12.2014 (for
USD 960,000.00) and invoice dated 22.12.2014 (for USD
600,000.00), the I.O. responded to say that he was unaware as
to who had signed the invoices.
55.9. As regards the third inward remittance, admittedly, no invoice
has been recovered; and therefore, the said transaction cannot
be traced back to the petitioner at least at this stage.
55.10. It is only in relation to the 01 set of transactions involving
outward remittance of money from Phoenix FZC, that the
petitioner was required to „conduct‟ the transaction as
Authorised Signatory for the bank account of the company. The
outward remittances were made on 11.01.2015, 14.01.2015 and
19.01.2015. In this behalf, instructions were received by the
petitioner from Sahil Mehta by e-mail instructing the petitioner
to conduct a specific remittance. E-mails dated 09.01.2015,
14.01.2015 and 16.01.2015 for the three remittances
respectively, are cited in evidence thereof. It is seen that each of
these e-mails was sent to the petitioner from the e-mail address
of Sahil Mehta.
55.11. The essence of the allegation made by the ED is that at the time
that the petitioner undertook the transactions as Authorised
Signatory for the bank account of the company, he knew that
the transactions were bogus, in that the money was being
remitted-out of the company without any genuine services
having been provided by Eximius Business Middle Ease FZC to
Phoenix FZC. On the other hand, the petitioner contends that he
was neither a director, nor a shareholder, nor did he have any
financial interest in the company; and as such he had no reason
or business to enquire as to whether any services had been
rendered by Eximius Business Middle Ease FZC to Phoenix
FZC towards which money was being remitted to it by the
company. In one instance however, when he was instructed to
remit USD 300,000.00 out of Phoenix FZC, vide e-mail dated
09.01.2015 the petitioner did inquire from Sahil Mehta as to the
reason for the remittance; to which enquiry however, he
received no response. The petitioner made the transaction
nevertheless. Yet again, this would indicate, at least prima-
facie, that the petitioner had no financial interest in the
transaction that he was performing on instructions of Sahil
Mehta; and therefore, it was not his business to insist that he be
told what the transaction was for.
55.12. The petitioner accepts that he received a small commission, on
an ad-hoc basis, from Sahil Mehta or his father Sohan Mehta
for the transactions he conducted as Authorised Signatory of the
company, which however, had no correlation to any particular
transaction. In his statement dated 09.08.2022 recorded under
section 50 of the PMLA, the petitioner in fact has said this :
I was not getting paid any fixed income or commission on
transactions I was being paid on ad hoc basis by Mr Sohan Mehta
like once in 2/3 months or more in cash (withdrawal from Phoenix
International FZC or through transfer from Phoenix International
FZC in my personal account in Mashreq Bank as per the
directions of Mr Sohan Mehta or sometimes on the instructions of
Mr Sahil Mehta.‖
There is no allegation that the petitioner received
anything over-and above such ad-hoc commission.
55.13. Also, if the basis of the allegation is that the petitioner had a
financial interest in the transactions since he received ad-hoc
commission for them, such allegation would be counter-
intuitive inasmuch as if the petitioner was connected with the
transactions themselves i.e. the money belonged to the
petitioner, then it is unlikely that he would be given a
commission for undertaking such transactions.
55.14. It is also noteworthy, that the ED itself says that Phoenix FZC
undertook several other transactions during the period under
consideration, of which only the aforesaid sets of transactions
have been alleged to be offending. Therefore, it is not as if
Phoenix FZC was a vehicle solely for undertaking the allegedly
offending transactions.
55.15. Furthermore, it is seen that after a point, once the allegedly
offending transactions had been completed, the three original
directors/shareholders of Phoenix FZC transferred their
shareholding to the petitioner‟s wife and simply stepped-out of
the company. It may be noted that nothing has been shown to
the court to indicate the reason for the erstwhile directors
leaving the company. Yet again, if the petitioner had knowledge
that the transactions conducted through Phoenix FZC were
unlawful or even suspect, it is counter-intuitive that he would
facilitate the transfer of shareholding in that very company to
his own wife, thereby converting the company to Phoenix FZE
and putting his wife in a legally controversial position.
56. Insofar as the ED not having arrested similarly placed co-accused
persons; and not even having arraigned some other persons evidently
connected with the offending transactions as accused in the
prosecution complaint, though these aspects would not be dispositive
of a bail plea one way or the other, they are also not wholly irrelevant
and the „doctrine of parity‟is not immaterial. As held by this court in
Ashish Mittal (supra) considering the nature of the offence, where the
gravamen of the offence is that several persons acting in concert have
siphoned-off and „laundered‟ monies, it is manifestly arbitrary for the
ED to have made selective arrests and arraignments. It has also been
brought to the notice of this court that Sanjay Godhwani, who may be
viewed as one of the main accused in this case, has been granted bail
by the learned trial court vide order dated 09.05.2023 in Bail
Application No. 688/2023 “... on merits as well as on medical
grounds...‖. This circumstance must also weigh in favour of the
petitioner being granted bail, considering that his role in the allegedly
offending transactions is evidently far more peripheral than that of co-
accused, Sanjay Godhwani.
57. Lastly, insofar as the allegation of the ED as regards the petitioner‟s
conduct is concerned, it would appear that the petitioner has been
forthcoming with the investigating agency about information that he
did possess about the affairs of Phoenix FZC, as is seen from his
statements recorded under section 50 (of Income Tax Act, 1961) of the PMLA. As regards the
ED‟s submission that the petitioner asked his son to delete e-mails
concerning transactions of Phoenix FZC from his e-mail ID
ramesh1994@yahoo.com and forwarded the same to another e-mail
ID mainjhukekanahi@gmail.com, it is observed that such e-mails
have subsequently been recovered by the investigating agency and the
investigation has not suffered on that count. The prosecution
complaint having now been filed, there is no demonstrable risk as to
evidence tampering.
58. In the circumstances, for the purpose of grant of regular bail to the
petitioner, this court is satisfied that there are reasonable grounds to
believe that the petitioner is „not guilty‟ of the offence under section 3 (of Income Tax Act, 1961)
of the PMLA. Further, considering that the prosecution complaint has
been filed before the learned trial court; that the petitioner has
materially co-operated in the investigation; and in view of the nature
of the alleged role played by the petitioner in the allegedly offending
transactions, this court is also satisfied that the petitioner is not likely
to commit any offence under PMLA while on bail.
59. The usual and ordinary considerations as referred to inter-alia in P.
Chidambaram (supra), beyond what may be purely theoretical
apprehensions in this case, can be adequately addressed by imposing
appropriately stringent conditions for grant of bail.
60. Having regard to the above, this court is of the view that the petitioner deserves to be granted relief; and is hereby admitted to regular bail pending trial, subject to the following conditions:
60.1. The petitioner shall furnish a personal bond in the sum of
Rs.25,00,000/- (Rs. Twenty-five lacs Only) with 01 surety in
the like amount from a family member, to the satisfaction of the
learned trial court;
60.2. The petitioner shall furnish to the Investigating Officer/S.H.O.
a cell-phone number on which the petitioner may be contacted
at any time and shall ensure that the number is kept active and
switched-on at all times;
60.3. The petitioner shall surrender his passport(s) to the learned trial
court and shall not travel out of India without prior permission
of the learned trial court;
60.4. The petitioner shall ordinarily reside at his place of residence in
Mumbai, India as per records; and shall inform the Investigating Officer in writing at least 07 days in advance if heproposes to change his place of residence;
60.5. The petitioner shall co-operate in any further investigation or
proceedings by the Investigating Officer, as and when required;
60.6. In addition to the above conditions, it is specifically directed
that the petitioner shall also not, whether directly or indirectly,
contact or visit or have any transaction with any of the
officials/employees of the banks, financial institutions,
companies, entities etc., who are concerned with the
prosecution complaint in this case, whether in India or abroad;
60.7. The Investigating Officer is further directed to issue a request
to the Bureau of Immigration, Ministry of Home Affairs of the
Government of India or other appropriate authority to forthwith
open a „Look-out-Circular‟ in the petitioner‟s name, to prevent
the petitioner from leaving the country, without the permission
of the learned trial court;
60.8. The petitioner shall not contact, nor visit, nor offer any
inducement, threat or promise to any of the prosecution
witnesses or other persons acquainted with the facts of case.
The petitioner shall not tamper with evidence nor otherwise
indulge in any act or omission that is unlawful or that would
prejudice the proceedings in the pending trial.
61. The petition is disposed-of in the above terms.
62. Pending applications, if any, also stand disposed of.
63. A copy of this order be communicated to the learned jail
superintendent forthwith.
ANUP JAIRAM BHAMBHANI J
MAY 30, 2023