Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 617 of 2001
PETITIONER:
STATE OF MAHARASHTRA & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
NAJAKAT ALIA MUBARAK ALI
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 09/05/2001
BENCH:
R.P. Sethi
JUDGMENT:
SETHI,J.
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Despite perusing the lucid judgment of Thomas, J. from
different angles and being aware of its far reaching effects
in the country, so far as the under trial prisoners are
concerned, I could not persuade myself to agree with the
interpretation given regarding the scope and implications of
Section 428 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, (hereinafter
referred to as ’the Code’).
Section 428 of the Code was brought on the statute book
for the first time in 1973. It was incorporated in the
light of the proposal put forward by the Joint Select
Committee appointed for that purpose. The Committee had
noted, with distress, that in many cases accused persons
were kept in prison for very long period as under-trial
prisoners and in some cases the sentence of imprisonment,
ultimately awarded, was a fraction of the period spent in
jail as under-trial prisoners. Despite the fact that
sometimes courts had been taking into account the period of
detention undergone as under-trial prisoners while passing
sentence and occasionally the sentence of imprisonment
restricted to the period already undergone. But that was
not always the case as in many cases the accused persons
were made to suffer jail life for a period out of proportion
to the gravity of offence or even the punishment provided
under the statute. The Committee noted with concern that a
large number of persons in the over-crowded jails of the
country were under-trial prisoners. The Section was sought
to remedy the said unsatisfactory state of affairs by
providing for setting off the period of detention as an
under-trial prisoners against the sentence of imprisonment
imposed on the accused. The purpose of incorporating
Section 428 was that period of detention undergone by the
accused be given set off against the sentence of
imprisonment imposed upon him in the same case. Before the
incorporation of the aforesaid section, the accused, upon
conviction, had to undergo the awarded sentence of
imprisonment notwithstanding the length of period spent by
him in detention during investigation, inquiry or trial of
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the case. Section 428 of the Code is preceded by Section
427 which provides that when any person already undergoing
sentence of imprisonment is sentenced on a subsequent
conviction of imprisonment, such imprisonment shall commence
at the expiration of the commencement to which he has been
previously sentenced, unless the court directs that the
subsequent sentence shall run concurrently with such
previous sentence. (underlining supplied) Section 427 of
the Code thus authorises a court of law to direct the
sentence awarded by it to run concurrently, obviously
keeping in view the facts and circumstances pertaining to
the case or the accused. His detention pending
investigation, inquiry and trial in that case or some other
cases being relevant consideration while directing the
sentences to run consecutively or concurrently. A plain
reading of Section 428 of the Code makes it clear that the
period of detention which the section permits to be set off
against the term of imprisonment, imposed on the accused
upon conviction, must be during the investigation, inquiry
or trial in connection with the same case in which he has
been convicted. Dealing with the nature of detention for
the purposes of the section, this Court in Govt. of Andhra
Pradesh & Anr. v. Anne Venkateswara Rao, etc. [AIR 1977
SC 1096 = (1977) 3 SCC 298] held: "Section 428 provides
that the period of detention of an accused as an undertrial
prisoner shall be set off against the term of imprisonment
imposed on him on conviction. The section only provides for
a "set off", it does not equate an "undertrial detention or
remand detention with imprisonment on conviction". The
provision as to set off expresses a legislative policy;
this does not mean that it does away with the difference in
the two kinds of detention and puts them on the same footing
for all purposes."
In Champalal Poonjaji Shah v. State of Maharashtra[AIR
1982 SC 791], where the petitioner was shown to have been
detained firstly under the provisions of MISA and later
under the provisions of COFEPOSA and after he was convicted
by a Magistrate and his conviction was set aside by the High
Court, the State filed an appeal by special leave, which was
allowed by this Court on August 12, 1981 (reported in AIR
1981 SC 1675) by setting aside the Judgment of acquittal
passed by the High Court and restoring that of the trial
magistrate convicting the accused under different heads of
charges and sentencing him to suffer imprisonment for
various terms ranging from two years to four years. Later
in the review petition filed, it was submitted on behalf of
the accused that the total of the three periods of detention
should be set off against the imprisonment imposed upon him.
Rejecting the contention, the Court held:
"We are unable to agree with the submission of Shri
Jethmalani. In the very case cited by the learned counsel,
the Court negatived the contention that the expression
’period of detention’ in Sec.428 Code of Criminal Procedure
included the detention under the Prevention Detention Act or
the Maintenance of Internal Security Act. It was observed
(para 7):
"It is true that the section speaks of the period of
detention undergone by an accused person, but it expressly
says that the detention mentioned refers to the detention
during the investigation, enquiry or trial of the case in
which the accused person has been convicted. The section
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makes it clear that the period of detention which it allows
to be set off against the term of imprisonment imposed on
the accused on conviction must be during the investigation,
enquiry or trial in connection with the ’same case’ in which
he has been convicted. We therefore agree with the High
Court that the period during which the Writ Petitioners were
in preventive detention cannot be set off under S.428
against the term of imprisonment imposed on them"
After holding that the period during which the
petitioners therein were in preventive detention could not
be ’set off’ under Section 428 Code of Criminal Procedure
against the term of imprisonment imposed on them, the Court
went on to consider whether the period during which the
petitioners were in preventive detention could for any
reason be considered as period during which the petitioners
were in detention as under-trial prisoners or prisoners
serving out a sentence on conviction. In the case of
prisoner A.V. Rao, the Court held that the period
commencing from the date when he would have normally been
arrested pursuant to the First Information Report registered
against him should be reckoned as period of detention as an
under-trial prisoner. In the case of another prisoner
Krishnaiah it was held that the period during which he was
in preventive detention subsequent to the conviction and
sentence imposed upon him should be treated as detention
pursuant to conviction and sentence. The case before us is
altogether different. The petitioner had been acquitted by
the High Court before any of the orders of detention were
made against him. There can be no question of the detention
being considered as detention pursuant to conviction; nor
can the detention be treated as that of an undertrial. It
is only in circumstances where the prisoner would have
unquestionably been in detention in connection with a
criminal case if he had not been preventively detained, his
preventive detention might be reckoned as detention as an
undertrial prisoner or detention pursuant to conviction, for
the purposes of S.428 Criminal P.C."
A perusal of the section unambiguously indicates that
only such accused is entitled to its benefit of that period
of detention which he has undergone during the
investigation, enquiry or trial of the same case. It does
not contemplate of the benefit of set-off of the period of
detention during investigation, inquiry or trial in any
other case. The purpose and object of the section, as
pointed out by Brother Thomas,J., is aimed at providing
amelioration to a prisoner in a case where he has been in
detention for no fault of his. The section, however, does
not intend to give any benefit or bonus to an accused guilty
of commission of more than one crime by treating the period
of detention during investigation, inquiry and trial in one
case as that period in the other cases also for the purposes
of set-off in the sentence. Such an entitlement requires
the judicial determination which can be adjudicated by a
court awarding the sentence in exercise of its powers under
Section 427 of the Code. The words "period of detention, if
any, undergone by him during the investigation, inquiry or
trial of the same case" are important to indicate the
paramount concern and intention of the legislature to
protect the interests of under-trial prisoners by giving
them the set-off of that period in "that case", at the
conclusion of the trial. The Section makes it clear that
the period of detention which it allows to be set off
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against the term of imprisonment imposed on the accused, on
conviction, must be during the investigation, inquiry or
trial in connection with the same case in which he has been
convicted.
By introducing the provision of set off, the legislature
intended to mitigate, to a great extent, the hardship caused
to the accused persons by reason of their being unable to
come out on bail during the trial period. While
interpreting Section 428 of the Code, the underlying object
of the Section cannot be lost sight of. Any set off claimed
under Section 428 has necessarily to be within the terms of
the Section and not beyond it. No accused person can claim
that irrespective of the terms of Section 428 of the Code,
he is entitled to the benefit of set-off in each and every
case. A bare reading of the Section indicates that an
accused person who has been convicted and sentenced to
imprisonment for a term is entitled to claim set off of the
period of detention undergone by him during the
investigation, inquiry or trial of the same case against the
term of imprisonment imposed on him on such conviction. The
section has imposed some restrictions for a convicted person
claiming the benefit of set off which are as under:-
(i) The imprisonment should be for a term.
(ii) The imprisonment should not be one awarded in
default of payment of fine.
(iii) The period of detention undergone by the accused
person during the investigation, inquiry or trial should
relate to the same case in which he is convicted and
sentenced to undergo imprisonment for a term.
The dictionary meaning of the word "same" is identical;
referring to a person or thing just mentioned; the same
thing as previously mentioned. It generally refers to the
last preceding antecedents; one and the same; not
distinct. Generally speaking the "same case" would thus
mean "same transaction" for which the accused has been
tried. Two different criminal cases, therefore, cannot be
treated to be the "the same case" in relation to an accused
for the purposes of determining the applicability of Section
428 of the Code.
The accused tried for various offences in one trial can
be held to be entitled to the benefit of Section 428 of the
Code being tried for the "same case". The words "same case"
appearing in the section are ejusdem generis to the
preceding words "investigation, enquiry or trial". If the
period of detention relating to investigation, enquiry or
trial is in a different case that would not ipso facto
entitle the accused to claim the benefit of Section 428 but
that may permit him to persuade the court to pass an
appropriate orders in terms of Section 427, keeping in view
the period of his under-trial detention in other cases as
well. It is the need of the time that the court convicting
the accused should develop a healthy practice of specifying
in the order the total period of pre-conviction detentions
that he has undergone in that case or in some other case for
the purposes of awarding the sentence upon conviction.
In Shabbu & Anr. v. State of U.P. & Anr. [1982
Crl.L.J. 1757] a Full Bench of the Allahabad High Court
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held:
"It is thus obvious that Section 428 Cr.P.C., is
intended to relieve the anguish of undertrials for their
prolonged detention in jail during the investigation,
inquiry or trial of a case. Its object is to confer a
special benefit upon a convict whereby his liability to
undergo the imprisonment, ultimately imposed upon him in a
case, stands reduced by the period during which he has
remained in jail as an under-trial prisoner in the same
case. It simply aims at setting off or crediting the period
of pre- conviction detention of the accused of a case
towards the sentence ultimately awarded to him after his
conviction in that very case."
After referring to the judgments of this Court in
Mr.Boucher Pierre Andre v. Superintendent Central Jail
Tihar, [AIR 1975 SC 164], Suraj Bhan v. Om Prakash [air
1976 sc 648], Govt. of A.P. v. A.V.Rao [AIR 1977 SC
1096], the earlier judgment of that Court in Nasim v. State
of U.P. [1978 All LJ 1284], the judgment of the Delhi High
Court in K.C. Das v. State[1979 Crl.LJ 362], of Bombay
High Court in Jaswant Lal Harjivan Das Dholkia v. State
[1979 Cri.LJ 971], Mohan Lal v. State of U.P. [1979 Luck
LJ 272], the Full Bench further held that under Section 428
the period of detention as an under-trial of an accused in a
particular case can be set off only towards the sentence
ultimately awarded to him in that very case. The Court
further held:
"Whether or not the detention of a person in one case
should also be treated to be his detention for the purposes
of any other case, wherein he is wanted, is a question to be
decided upon the facts and circumstances of each case. No
set formula can be laid down in that behalf."
Dealing with the scope and object of Section 428 this
Court in Raghbir Singh v. State of Haryana [1984 (4) SCC
348] held: "There was no provision corresponding to Section
428 of the Code in the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898
which was repealed and replaced by the present Code. It was
introduced with the object of remedying the unsatisfactory
state of affairs that was prevailing when the former Code
was in force. It was then found that many persons were
being detained in prison at the pre-conviction stage for
unduly long periods, many times for periods longer than the
actual sentence of imprisonment that could be imposed on
them on conviction. In order to remedy the above situation,
Section 428 of the Code was enacted. It provides for the
setting off of the period of detention as an under-trial
prisoner against the sentence of imprisonment imposed on
him. Hence in order to secure the benefit of Section 428 of
the Code, the prisoner should show that he had been detained
in prison for the purpose of investigation, inquiry or trial
of the case in which he is later on convicted and sentenced.
It follows that if a person is undergoing the sentence of
imprisonment imposed by a court of law on being convicted of
an offence in one case during the period of investigation,
inquiry or trial of some other case, he cannot claim that
the period occupied by such investigation, inquiry or trial
should be set off against the sentence of imprisonment to be
imposed in the latter case even though he was under
detention during such period. In such a case the period of
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detention is really a part of the period of imprisonment
which he is undergoing having been sentenced earlier for
another offence. It is not the period of detention
undergone by him during the investigation, inquiry or trial
of the same case in which he is later on convicted and
sentenced to undergo imprisonment. He cannot claim a double
benefit under Section 428 of the Code i.e. the same period
being counted as part of the period of imprisonment imposed
for committing the former offence and also being set off
against the period of imprisonment imposed for committing
the latter offence as well. The instruction issued by the
High Court in this regard is unexceptionable. The stand of
the State Government has, therefore, to be upheld."
After going through the scheme of the Code and the
object for which Section 428 was incorporated, I have
reached the conclusion that the law laid down by this Court
in Raghubir Singh’s case(supra) does not require any review
or a new interpretation. Taking any other view would amount
to legislating and amending the plain meanings of the
section. Giving a contrary interpretation may, in some
cases, be against the public policy. Any person accused of
a heinous crime, in that even, be at liberty to commit minor
offences and being under trial prisoner in the main case,
eventually may not get any imprisonment of law for the minor
offences committed by him. It cannot be the object of
civilised criminal jurisprudence to encourage the repetition
of crime by adoption of an approach of liberality. The
commercial approach of sale of commodities providing for
purchasing of one expensive item and getting three free with
it, cannot be imported into criminal justice system. The
views of Guwahati High Court in Lalrinfela Vs. State of
Mizoram and Ors. (1982 Crl.L.J 1793), Andhra Pradesh High
Court in Gedala Ramulu Naidu Vs. State of A.P. and Anr.
(1982 Crl. Law Journal 2186) and Madras High Court in
Chinnasamy Vs. State of Tamil Nadu and Ors. (1984 Crl.
Law Journal 447) would amount to giving bonus to a person
accused of a heinous crime to have the minor offences
committed with it virtually without any punishment of law.
Delhi High Court in K.C. Das Vs. The State (1979 Crl. Law
Journal 362) is shown to have adopted an approach which
apparently is contradictory in terms. After holding:
"The words "of the same case" are important. The
section speaks of the "period of detention" undergone by the
accused person, but it expressly says that the detention
mentioned refers to the detention during the investigation,
inquiry or trial of the case in which the accused person has
been convicted. The section makes it clear that the period
of detention which it allows to be set off against the term
of imprisonment impugned on the accused on conviction must
be during the investigation, inquiry or trial in connection
with the "same case" in which he has been convicted."
the Court by referring to an illustration formulated by
itself in para 3 of the judgment, posed a question to
itself, an answered the same, observing:
"Will it not be true to say that the accused is an
undertrial prisoner in the second case in our illustration.
If it is so he will be entitled to set off his pre-
conviction period against the term of imprisonment imposed
on him in the second case as in the first. We see no ground
to deny him the benefit in the second case."
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For reaching at this conclusion the reliance was placed
upon the judgment of this Court in Govt. of Andhra Pradesh
and Anr. Vs. Anne Venkateswara Rao. etc. (supra). In
that case, this court had nowhere held that the set off
contemplated under Section 428 of the Code can be claimed by
a convicted person, irrespective of his detention in the
same case or in some other case.
The object of criminal justice system is to reform the
criminal but not to encourage him for the repetition of
crime. Penology has a twin object, i.e. (i) punishing the
criminal to avoid repetition of crime and (ii) to endeavour
for his reform wherever possible. The increasing crime in
the country has seriously to be taken note of. Crime is an
act of warfare against community touching new depths of
lawlessness. The object of imposing deterrent sentences is
to protect the community against callous criminals; to
administer as clearly as possible to others tempted to
follow into lawlessness on a war scale if they are brought
to and convicted, deterrent punishment will follow and to
deter criminals from repeating their criminal acts in
future. Fazal Ali,J. in Maru Ram Vs. Union of India [
1981 (1) SCC 106) rightly observed:
"The question, therefore, is - should the country take
the risk of innocent lives being lost at the hands of
criminals committing heinous crimes is the holdy hope or
wishful thinking that one day or the other, a criminal,
however dangerous or callous he may be, will reform himself.
Valmikis are not born everyday and to expect that our
present generation, with the prevailing social and economic
environment, would produce Valmikis day after day is to hope
for the impossible."
Discretion of treating under-trial detention period may
be relevant consideration for the Court while passing orders
in terms of Section 427 of the Code but the accused cannot
be permitted to claim set off of the under-trial period
undergone by him in connection with other cases. Powers of
the Court to impose sentences should not be allowed to be
regulated at the instance or discretion of the accused.
The fall out of the interpretation giving the benefit of
detention during investigation, inquiry and trial in one
case, in the other case, may also tempt the investigating
agencies not to arrest the accused for the commission of the
second offence pending conclusion of the trial and passing
of sentence in the first case. After conviction and
sentence in a criminal case, if arrested in the second case,
the accused shall not be entitled to claim the benefit of
Section 428 of the Code because the sentence, upon
conviction, can obviously be not equated with the period of
detention contemplated under Section 428 of the Code. As
such by adopting such a recourse, the courts would not, in
any case, advance the interests of justice but actually and
factually frustrate its purpose defeating the concept of
speedy trial in criminal cases.
Facts of this case are that the respondent was arrested
on 29th November, 1995 in connection with CR 707/95
registered at Khar Police Station, Mumbai. During the
investigation it transpired that he was also involved in the
offences registered vide CR 737/95 on 29th November, 1995
Santacruz Police Station. He was shown arrested in both
crime numbers. After being chargesheeted in both the cases,
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he was tried separately. In one of the cases he was
convicted and sentenced under Sections 395 and 397 of IPC on
3.4.1998. The learned Judge held that the accused was
entitled to set off under Section 428 of Cr.P.C. for the
period of custody already undergone. He was convicted in
the second case for the offences punishable under Section
392, 395 of IPC and held entitled to set off under Section
428 of Cr.P.C. The respondent prayed for his release as
according to him, he had already served sentences. Relying
upon the Government Resolution dated 7th September, 1974 the
Jail Authorities refused to release the respondent on the
ground that he could not be given set off in the second case
as he had been given set off in the first case. The accused
filed a petition in the High Court which was allowed by
impugned order, holding that the convict was entitled to
benefit of Section 428 of the Code in both the cases for the
period of detention undergone by him during investigation,
inquiry and trial.
In the light of the view I have taken the impugned
judgment of the High Court cannot be sustained and is liable
to be set aside. Allowing the appeal filed by the State the
judgment impugned is set aside holding that the respondent
is not entitled to the benefit of set off in the sentence
awarded to him in the second case.