Passport Renewal Despite Minor Pending Criminal Case for Overseas Resident: Commentary on Mohasin Sabbir Ahmed Surati v. Union of India

Balancing Minor Pending Criminal Proceedings with Passport Renewal for Overseas Workers: A Commentary on Mohasin Sabbir Ahmed Surati v. Union of India

Court: High Court of Gujarat at Ahmedabad
Case No.: R/Special Civil Application No. 13888 of 2025
Date of Judgment: 25 November 2025
Coram: Honourable Mr. Justice Aniruddha P. Mayee
Parties: Mohasin Sabbir Ahmed Surati (Petitioner) v. Union of India & Anr. (Respondents)

1. Introduction

This writ petition before the Gujarat High Court concerns the intersection of three important legal and practical considerations:

  • the right of an Indian citizen to hold and renew a passport,
  • the effect of pending criminal proceedings on passport issuance, and
  • the livelihood and immigration vulnerabilities of an Indian worker residing abroad.

The petitioner, an Indian citizen working in Kuwait, applied for renewal of his passport. During processing, an objection was raised by the passport authorities on the ground of alleged suppression of a pending criminal case, specifically an offence under Section 281 of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS), registered at Lunawada Town Police Station. The case involved allegations of rash and negligent driving endangering pedestrians and was described as “pending adjudication”.

The passport application was consequently put on hold. The petitioner challenged this administrative obstruction through a Special Civil Application (a writ petition under Article 226 of the Constitution, as styled in Gujarat), asserting that:

  • he was unaware of the FIR, which had been filed by a Police Head Constable;
  • he had already provided a written explanation to the Embassy of India in Kuwait;
  • he was willing to fully cooperate with the trial court; and
  • non-renewal of the passport would expose him to forced deportation, possible permanent blacklisting, and loss of livelihood.

The core legal tension is between:

  • the State’s interest in ensuring that an accused is available for criminal proceedings, and
  • the individual’s right to travel and work abroad, and to avoid disproportionate consequences for a relatively minor alleged offence.

The judgment is concise but significant in how it approaches the practical problem of passport renewal in the presence of a pending minor criminal case concerning rash and negligent driving under the BNS, especially where the applicant is an NRI whose entire livelihood depends on continued legal stay in a foreign country.

2. Summary of the Judgment

2.1 Factual Matrix

  • An FIR was registered against the petitioner at Lunawada Town Police Station under Section 281 of the BNS, for rash and negligent driving endangering pedestrians.
  • During processing of the petitioner’s passport renewal application (Reference No. 25-2003972624), the passport authority raised an objection by order dated 25.08.2025, pointing to:
    • the pendency of this criminal case, and
    • alleged suppression of this information in the passport application.
  • The petitioner claimed that he was not aware of the FIR since the complainant was a Police Head Constable, and further:
    • he had already submitted a written explanation dated 07.09.2025 to the Embassy of India at Kuwait; and
    • he undertook to remain present before and cooperate with the trial court for expeditious disposal of the criminal case.
  • He argued that non-renewal of the passport would:
    • subject him to forced deportation from Kuwait,
    • risk permanent blacklisting, and
    • destroy his livelihood.

2.2 Stand of the Respondents

The Union of India (and concerned passport authorities) defended their action by contending:

  • that the FIR and criminal case were pending against the petitioner, and
  • therefore, the objection raised to his passport renewal was valid and lawful.

However, even the respondents’ counsel ultimately left it to the Court to pass appropriate directions in the specific facts of the case.

2.3 Decision

The Court, after hearing both sides and perusing the record, held as follows:

  • It noted that the offence alleged is rash and negligent driving endangering pedestrians, and accepted the petitioner’s undertaking to cooperate with the criminal proceedings and attend the trial.
  • It also took note of the written explanation already submitted by the petitioner to the Embassy of India at Kuwait.
  • In light of:
    • the peculiar facts and circumstances,
    • the nature of the offence mentioned in the FIR, and
    • the petitioner’s employment in Kuwait and the serious consequences of non-renewal of his passport,
    the Court was inclined to intervene.
  • The Court directed respondent no. 2 (the concerned passport authority) to:
    “process the Passport Application Reference No.25-2003972624 of the petitioner within a period of 4 weeks on its own merits and in accordance with law in view of the written explanation dated 07.09.2025 submitted before the authorities.”
  • The writ petition was disposed of with no order as to costs.

Importantly, the Court did not:

  • quash the FIR or criminal proceedings,
  • direct issuance of a passport as an absolute mandate, or
  • immunize the petitioner from the legal consequences of the pending case.

Instead, it required the authorities to process the application promptly and lawfully, considering the explanation and circumstances, rather than letting the objection operate as an indefinite bar.

3. Detailed Analysis

3.1 Constitutional and Statutory Background

3.1.1 Constitutional Right to Travel and Passport

While this order does not explicitly refer to the Constitution, it operates within the well-established constitutional framework that:

  • the right to travel abroad is a facet of the fundamental right to personal liberty under Article 21 (as recognized in Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India), and
  • any restriction on this right, including by refusal or obstruction in issuance of a passport, must conform to a procedure that is just, fair and reasonable.

Although not cited, this constitutional backdrop informs the High Court’s choice to prevent a disproportionate consequence (possible deportation and blacklisting) arising from a relatively minor, non-heinous alleged offence.

3.1.2 Passports Act, 1967 – Refusal on Ground of Pending Criminal Proceedings

The Passports Act, 1967, regulates the issuance, refusal, impounding and revocation of passports in India. Two provisions are particularly relevant contextually:

  • Section 5 – governs the application and issue of passports.
  • Section 6(2)(f) – empowers the passport authority to refuse to issue or renew a passport if:
    “proceedings in respect of an offence alleged to have been committed by the applicant are pending before a criminal court in India.”

However, that provision is permissive, not automatic: it allows, but does not mandate, refusal. The authority must exercise discretion judiciously and proportionately, taking into account:

  • the nature and gravity of the offence,
  • the stage of proceedings,
  • the likelihood of the accused absconding, and
  • other relevant circumstances such as employment abroad.

The High Court’s direction — to process the application “on its own merits and in accordance with law” — implicitly requires the passport authority to exercise this statutory discretion in a reasoned, non-mechanical manner, rather than treating mere pendency of an FIR as a blanket bar.

3.1.3 The Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS) and Section 281

The criminal case against the petitioner is under Section 281 of the BNS. The judgment describes the offence as:

“rash and negligent driving endangering the lives of the pedestrians”.

Without needing to reproduce the exact statutory text, the key point from the judgment’s own characterization is:

  • this is a road-traffic-related offence,
  • falling within the category of rash and negligent acts, and
  • is neither alleged to involve moral turpitude, economic offences, nor serious violence.

Therefore, the Court clearly treats it as a minor, non-heinous offence, which becomes crucial to its decision to grant relief regarding passport processing.

3.2 Precedents Cited – And the Absence Thereof

3.2.1 No Explicit Case Law in the Order

The High Court’s order is characteristically brief and does not cite any case law or prior precedent explicitly. Such summary orders are not uncommon in writ proceedings, especially when the Court is:

  • acting on undisputed facts,
  • granting limited, fact-sensitive relief, and
  • issuing directions framed in terms that preserve the authority’s statutory discretion.

Consequently, the judgment draws no express line of authority from prior Supreme Court or High Court decisions on passports and criminal cases. However, it implicitly aligns with broader jurisprudence in three areas:

  • constitutional right to travel abroad,
  • judicial review of administrative discretion under the Passports Act, and
  • proportionality in restricting movement due to pending minor criminal proceedings.

3.2.2 Relevant Jurisprudence in the Background (Not Cited, but Contextual)

While these cases are not mentioned in the text of the judgment, it is useful for a commentator to situate this order within the following well-known precedents:

  • Satwant Singh Sawhney v. D. Ramarathnam (1967): Recognized that the right to travel abroad is part of personal liberty, which cannot be curtailed without authority of law.
  • Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India (1978):
    • Held that “procedure established by law” under Article 21 must be just, fair, and reasonable.
    • Specifically dealt with impounding of a passport and insisted on non-arbitrary exercise of power and adherence to principles of natural justice.
  • Suresh Nanda v. CBI (2008): While focused on seizure of a passport in a corruption case, it underscored that curtailment of passport rights has to satisfy tests of necessity and proportionality.

These authorities collectively underscore that:

  • a passport is not a mere administrative convenience, but an enabling instrument for exercising the fundamental right to travel abroad,
  • restrictions on passport issuance/renewal must be founded on law, applied in a non-arbitrary manner, and
  • the more minor the alleged offence and the greater the hardship to the citizen, the more closely courts will scrutinize such restrictions.

The Gujarat High Court’s reasoning — particularly the emphasis on the minor nature of the offence and the severe consequences of non-renewal — is entirely consistent with this jurisprudential trend, though it is not explicitly anchored to these cases.

3.3 The Court’s Legal Reasoning

3.3.1 Framing the Core Problem

The Court identifies the key features of the case:

  • The criminal case arises from rash and negligent driving, a relatively low-order offence in the criminal hierarchy.
  • The petitioner claims unawareness of the FIR, citing that the complainant is a Police Head Constable (suggesting perhaps that no direct civilian complaint was made to him, though the Court does not delve into this in detail).
  • The petitioner has:
    • already submitted a written explanation to the Embassy of India in Kuwait, and
    • furnished an undertaking to cooperate with the trial court and to attend the trial.
  • Non-renewal of the passport would have grave downstream consequences: forced deportation, risk of blacklisting, and loss of livelihood, all while the criminal case is still pending and not adjudicated.

Thus the Court is faced with deciding whether the passport authority’s objection and consequent inaction are compatible with the legal framework and proportional in the circumstances.

3.3.2 Treatment of “Suppression” of the Offence

The impugned communication of 25.08.2025 spoke of alleged suppression of the offence in the passport application. Typically, passport forms require disclosure of pending criminal cases, and omission can be treated as suppression or misrepresentation.

In this case:

  • The petitioner’s plea is that he was not aware of the FIR.
  • He has submitted a written explanation to the authorities.

The Court does not give a definitive finding on whether there was deliberate suppression. Instead, it:

  • records the fact of the petitioner’s explanation and undertaking, and
  • directs that the application be processed “on its own merits and in accordance with law in view of the written explanation”.

This approach:

  • leaves open to the passport authority the question of how to treat any misstatement/omission, but
  • disallows a blanket, indefinite freeze on the application solely on that basis, without a reasoned decision.

3.3.3 Central Role of the “Nature of the Offence”

Paragraph 7 of the order is critical. The Court states that:

“In the peculiar facts and circumstances of the present case and considering the nature of offence as mentioned in the F.I.R., this Court is inclined to direct the respondent No.2 to process the Passport Application…”

Two elements stand out:

  • The Court explicitly recognizes the nature of the offence (rash and negligent driving) as a factor militating against an absolute or prolonged bar on passport processing. This implies:
    • a minor, non-heinous, non-economic, non-terrorism-related offence, and
    • low risk of the accused using a foreign stay to evade justice, especially in the face of an undertaking.
  • The phrase “peculiar facts and circumstances” signals that the Court is rendering a fact-specific, discretionary judgment, rather than laying down a rigid rule for all cases of pending criminal proceedings.

3.3.4 Weighing Hardship: Employment Abroad and Risk of Deportation

A striking aspect of the reasoning is its recognition of the consequences of passport non-renewal for a worker abroad:

  • The petitioner is employed in Kuwait; his legal stay is dependent on a valid passport.
  • Non-renewal could trigger:
    • forced deportation;
    • possible permanent blacklisting (a serious long-term disability in the Gulf labour market); and
    • loss of livelihood with potentially severe financial and familial repercussions.

By expressly recording these consequences, the Court is applying a proportionality lens (even if not using that terminology):

  • How severe is the alleged wrong? – traffic-related rash and negligent driving.
  • How severe is the restriction proposed? – effective loss of the ability to remain employed abroad, with potentially lifelong consequences.
  • Are there less restrictive ways to ensure the criminal case proceeds? – yes, via the petitioner’s undertaking to attend and cooperate, and the trial court’s powers to secure presence.

This proportionality analysis is consistent with modern constitutional doctrine, even though it is not spelled out in doctrinal terms within the brief order.

3.3.5 Scope of Relief: Directing “Consideration”, Not Granting the Passport

The relief is carefully calibrated. The Court:

  • does not order the authorities to issue or renew the passport.
  • does order the authorities to:
    • process the application within a fixed time frame (four weeks),
    • do so on its own merits,
    • in accordance with law, and
    • consider the written explanation already furnished.

This preserves:

  • the statutory discretion of the passport authority under the Passports Act, while
  • ensuring that the authority does not exercise that discretion in an arbitrary, open-ended, or purely mechanical manner based solely on the fact of a pending case.

The Court thus plays a classic judicial review role:

  • guiding the exercise of power,
  • setting temporal limits, and
  • requiring relevant considerations to be taken into account,

without itself substituting the administrative decision on the merits.

3.4 Potential Impact of the Judgment

3.4.1 For Overseas Indian Workers with Minor Pending Cases

The order is particularly relevant for:

  • Indians working abroad who face minor criminal cases (especially traffic-related or other non-heinous offences), and
  • whose passport renewal is held up merely because of the pendency of criminal proceedings coupled with an allegation of non-disclosure.

It can be cited as persuasive authority that:

  • mere pendency of such a case is not an absolute bar to passport renewal, particularly where:
    • the offence is minor;
    • the citizen’s entire livelihood abroad is at stake; and
    • the person gives a clear undertaking to cooperate with the criminal court.
  • High Courts under Article 226 can and do intervene to ensure that passport authorities exercise their discretion proportionately.

3.4.2 For Passport Authorities and the Union of India

Administratively, the judgment implies that:

  • Passport authorities should avoid a one-size-fits-all approach to pending criminal cases.
  • They need to consider:
    • the nature and seriousness of the offence,
    • the stage of the proceedings,
    • the risk of absconding, and
    • the concrete hardship to the applicant.
  • Where an applicant has provided an explanation and an undertaking to cooperate, and the case is minor in nature, it is generally disproportionate to indefinitely stall passport processing.
  • If, notwithstanding these factors, an authority decides to refuse renewal under Section 6(2)(f), such decision should:
    • be taken within a reasonable time,
    • be properly reasoned, and
    • be amenable to judicial review.

3.4.3 For Criminal Courts in India

Although not directly addressed in this judgment, one indirect impact is on criminal courts handling cases involving NRIs or overseas workers:

  • Courts may increasingly be faced with accused who must travel abroad for livelihood.
  • In appropriate cases, courts may:
    • accept undertakings for appearance on specific dates,
    • grant exemptions from routine personal appearance where law allows, or
    • utilize technology (e.g., video conferencing) when permissible.

The present judgment reinforces that the criminal justice system must be enforced without unnecessarily destroying a person’s legitimate employment abroad, especially for minor offences, so long as mechanisms exist to secure their participation in the proceedings.

3.4.4 Doctrinal Positioning

Doctrinally, this judgment contributes to a growing line of thought that:

  • Pendency of a criminal case is a relevant but not decisive factor in passport matters.
  • The nature of the alleged offence and the hardship to the applicant are critical in judging whether refusal or delay of passport renewal is reasonable.
  • Courts will be more inclined to intervene where:
    • the offence is non-heinous,
    • the administrative action is open-ended or mechanical, and
    • disproportionate personal and economic consequences are evident.

4. Complex Concepts Simplified

4.1 “Special Civil Application” and Writ Jurisdiction

In Gujarat, a petition filed under Article 226 of the Constitution (for writs like mandamus, certiorari, etc.) is often titled a “Special Civil Application”. Through such a petition, a citizen can:

  • challenge actions or inactions of government authorities;
  • ask the High Court to enforce legal rights, including those related to passports; and
  • seek directions that authorities act “in accordance with law”.

4.2 “Suppression of Offence” in Passport Applications

Passport forms typically ask: “Are any criminal proceedings pending against you?” If the applicant answers “No” despite having a pending FIR or case, authorities may treat this as:

  • “suppression of material facts”, or
  • “misrepresentation”.

However, sometimes an applicant genuinely does not know about an FIR. The legal question is then:

  • Was the non-disclosure deliberate or inadvertent?
  • Has the applicant given a credible explanation?

The present judgment does not declare whether there was deliberate suppression. It emphasizes that the applicant has:

  • furnished a written explanation, and
  • must nevertheless have his application processed on the merits, not left in limbo.

4.3 “Pending Adjudication” versus Mere Registration of FIR

The order notes that an FIR has been registered and the case is “pending adjudication”. In criminal process:

  • Registration of FIR = police formally record information about an alleged offence.
  • Adjudication pending = the matter has proceeded to, or is in the process of coming before, a court for trial or other judicial decision.

For passport purposes, what usually matters is whether proceedings are pending before a criminal court, not just that an FIR exists. The wording in the order suggests the case has reached a stage where a court is seized of it (though the exact stage is not described).

4.4 “On Its Own Merits and in Accordance with Law”

When a court directs an authority to act “on its own merits and in accordance with law”, it means:

  • the authority must independently apply the governing statute and rules,
  • consider all relevant facts (including explanations and undertakings), and
  • reach a reasoned decision that respects legal principles (such as non-arbitrariness).

The court is not itself deciding whether the passport should be granted or refused, but is ensuring that the authority does not refuse to decide or act irrationally.

4.5 “Peculiar Facts and Circumstances”

This phrase is often used by courts to signal that:

  • the decision is based heavily on specific facts of the case;
  • the ruling is not a sweeping general rule for all similar cases; and
  • future cases may be decided differently if their facts are different (e.g., if the offence is serious like terrorism, or if there is a high risk of absconding).

5. Conclusion

Mohasin Sabbir Ahmed Surati v. Union of India is a succinct but meaningful addition to the jurisprudence on passports and pending criminal proceedings. The Gujarat High Court carefully balances:

  • the State’s legitimate interest in prosecuting an alleged offence, and
  • the individual’s right to travel, work abroad, and avoid disproportionate hardship.

The Court acknowledges:

  • that a criminal case is indeed pending against the petitioner,
  • that allegations of non-disclosure have been raised, but also
  • that the offence is minor (rash and negligent driving),
  • that the petitioner has provided a written explanation and an undertaking to cooperate, and
  • that denial of passport renewal would carry drastic consequences for an overseas worker.

Against this background, the Court:

  • refrains from quashing the criminal case or mandating passport issuance, but
  • directs the passport authority to process the renewal application within four weeks, on its own merits, in accordance with law, and in light of the petitioner’s explanation.

The key takeaways are:

  • Pendency of a minor criminal case is not an absolute bar to passport renewal, especially for overseas workers whose livelihoods depend on it.
  • Authorities must exercise their discretion under the Passports Act in a proportionate and non-mechanical manner, considering:
    • the nature of the offence,
    • the applicant’s explanation and undertaking, and
    • the real-world consequences of refusal or prolonged delay.
  • High Courts remain prepared, in appropriate cases, to use writ jurisdiction to unlock administrative stalemates and require time-bound, lawful decision-making.

In the broader legal context, this judgment underscores the evolving equilibrium between criminal law enforcement and the protection of mobility and livelihood rights in a world where a large segment of Indian citizens live and work abroad. It offers a reasoned, rights-sensitive template for dealing with passport applications in the shadow of minor pending criminal cases.

Case Details

Year: 2025
Court: Gujarat High Court

Judge(s)

HONOURABLE MR. JUSTICE ANIRUDDHA P. MAYEE

Advocates

JAYDEEP H SINDHI(9585) MR PRADIP D BHATE(1523)

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