Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
G. KRISHTA GOUD & J. BHOOMAIAH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF ANDHRA PRADESH & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT03/10/1975
BENCH:
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950, Art. 72-Scope of
President’s power-Power of review of Presidents’ action by
Courts.
HEADNOTE:
The petitioners were found guilty of murder by the
court and sentenced to death, Their petition to the
President of India for commuting the death sentence was
rejected, Thereupon, they filed a writ petition in the High
Court to quash the order of the President on the ground that
he had not taken into account two factors, namely, (1) the
offences were ’political’; and (2) the prevailing trends
against death sentence. The High Court dismissed the
petition,
Dismissing the petition for special leave to this
Court.
^
HELD: (1) Assuming that the offences are political
offences, under the Indian Penal Code, murder is murder and
judges cannot re-write, the law whatever their views on
death sentence, as citizens, may be, and interfere where
they have no jurisdiction, [75 B-C; 77 H],
(2) All power however majestic the dignitary wielding
it may be, shall be exercised in good faith with intelligent
and informed care and honestly for the public weal. But,
when the Constitution has empowered the nation’s highest
Executive as the repository of the clemency power, the Court
cannot intervene and judicial review is excluded by
implication. Since, the contention, in this case, that
equality is denied in the matter of sentence because some
get the benefit of clemency while others do not, has no
foundation. nor is there any trace of despotism involved, it
is not necessary to examine in whom the remedy lies if
arbitrary exercise of public power is definitely established
a particular case. [76 E-H].
The rejection, however, of one clemency petition does
not exhaust the power of the President or the Governor.
Therefore, the petitioners may urge the circumstances
pressed before this Court for clemency again before the
President.] [77 D-E].
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Petition for Special
Leave to Appeal (Crl) No. 840 of 1975.
From the judgment and order dated 1st August, 1975 of
the Andhra Pradesh High Court at Hyderabad in Criminal Writ
Petition No. 4168 of 1975.
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R. K. Garg S. C. Agarwala V. J. Francis and Ram
Panjwani, for the petitioners.
P. Ram Reddy and P. P. Rao for the respondent.
ORDER OF THE COURT
The young petitioners held to be murderers by the Court
and sentenced to death, having regard to the blood-curdling
ruthlessness of the guilt, crossed over from the
jurisdiction of courts to the clemency zone of the President
under Art 72. This last chance to live appeal for mercy by
men who mercilessly killed, allegedly
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driven by the humanist urge for catalysing social justice
through terrorist technology, found no compassionate
response. The refusal of the President to commute the death
sentence rushed the petitioners back to the High Court to
save their life through the Court’s writ. Rejection by that
Court has compelled them to seek judicial sanctuary in the
Supreme Court as the final scene of the Fifth Act of the
tragic drama is drawing near.
Shri Garg has grounded his arguments on two socio-legal
basics. A politically motivated offence committed by the two
frustrated men who were disenchanted by the die-hard
injustice of massive suffering and suppression, to shock and
shake the custodians of the status quo ante, stands on a
separate footing from the common run of crimes and the root
humanity of their ruthless inhumanity, though pertinent, was
blindly brushed aside by the President. Thereby he excluded
a crucially conscientious consideration from an essentially
compassionate jurisdiction which rendered the rejection of
commutation illegal and unconscionable. Assuming a measure
of validity in this socio-poilitical submission, can the
Court-even the Supreme Court-rush in where the Constitution
has made the President the repository of a benignant life-
or-death power, non-justiciable without breaching the dykes
of Art. 72 (or Art. 151, if it be the Governor) and non-
accountable except to the good conscience of the top
Executive Justice is not always channeled through a Judge
and what is out of bounds for and not enforceable through
regular courts does not, ipso jure become arbitrary or
unjust. In our Constitutional order any system of
jurisprudence the Judicature is a great instrumentality but
not ’a brooding omnipotence in the sky’. Shri Garg,
undaunted by this inhibitive doctrine, insisted that the
dynamics of power in a democratic polity must be governed by
the rule of law, ’basic feature’ of the Constitution. True,
where law ends, tyranny begins. Counsel’s contention is that
the President’s ’mercy’ power is subject to this paramount
obligation to reckon all relevant, and reject all irrelevant
factors in reaching his verdict of death or life. Here,
urged Shri Garg, two vital digits have been overlooked-that
political offenders from Bhagat Singh to the Spanish five
(whose execution recently quaked world public opinion) were
not common criminals and, secondly, that there has been
obliviousness to the growing great trend against death
penalty as a legal barbarity now gleaned in pronouncements
of this Court and the penal reform currently before
Parliament.
The force of the twin submissions, together with a
third noticed in Ediga Anamma [1974]3SCR329 viz., the
secred, yet secular commandment "thou shall not kill" need
not be under-rated to undo their argumentative potency in
this forum. What is powerful as pre legislative campaign or
post-legislative reform, what is high ethics and noble
humanism on Sunday pulpit and Political platform and what is
sure to dawn tomorrow but is struggling to be born today all
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these are on the law moulding matrix but not law now and
here. We are not prophets of the Advent but pragmatic
technicians using the tools and the know-how handed down to
Courts by the legislature. Judges may have a creative role
and do activist engineering
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but obedient to the text of the Constitution. Such a
perspective informs our appraisal of both the contentions-
enumerated by him as nine, but condensed by us into two.
Patriots and others seeking of accomplish political
goals or to attack the political order may commit acts which
under municipal laws may be crimes - but are designated in
other jurisdictions like extradition laws and sometimes for
purposes of reprieve as a class called political offences.
But the Penal Code which, by oath of office, we enforce,
makes no such classification and in the cold stare of our
criminal system, murder is murder. Moreover, the capital
punishment was imposed by a court in this case as early as
1972 and upheld right through. As Judges, we cannot re-write
the law whatever our views of urgent reforms, as citizens,
may be. And the sentence of death having been awarded by the
Court, the judicial frontiers have been crossed and, however
regrettable and irrevocable, taking of human life by the
States’ coercive apparatus, may be, our sympathies have no
jural relevance. So the new and expanding trend towards
abolition of capital penalty, while true, cannot help the
hangman’s rope in this case.
The surviving point about the assail on the exercise of
the ’clemency’ power of President demands closer
examination.
A constitutional order built on the founding faith of
the rule of law may posit wide powers in high functionaries
and validly exclude judge-power from eating these forbidden
fruits. Art. 72 (and art. 161) designedly and benignantly
vest in the highest executive the humane and vast
jurisdiction to remit, reprieve, respite, commute and pardon
criminals on whom judicial sentences may have been imposed.
Historically, it is a sovereign power; politically, it is a
residuary power; humanistically, it is in aid of intangible
justice where imponderable factors operate for the well-
being of the community, beyond the blinkered court process.
In Nanavati(1) is Court half explored the area of ’mercy’
power but switched on to a different question without
pronouncing on the Court’s review of Presidential exercise
of commutation or respite power. Sinha.C.J. speaking for the
Court, observed:
Pardon is one of the many prerogatives which have
been recognised since time immemorial as being vested
in the sovereign" wherever the sovereignty might lie.
Whether the sovereign happened to be an absolute
monarch or a popular republic or a constitutional king
or queen, sovereignty has always been associated with
the source power-the power to appoint or dismiss public
servants, the power to declare war and conclude peace,
the power to legislate and the power to adjudicate upon
all kinds of the disputes."
(p. 516)
x x x x
1) [1961] 1 S. C, R. 497.
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The Rule of law, in contradiction to the rule of
man, includes within its wide connotation the absence
of arbitrary power, submission to the ordinary law of
the land, and the equal protection of the laws. As a
result of the historical process aforesaid" the
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absolute and arbitrary power of the monarch came to be
canalised into three distinct wings of the Government".
(p. 517)
"We have thus briefly set out the history of the
genesis and development of the Royal Prerogative of
Mercy because Mr. Seervai has strongly emphasised that
the Royal Prerogative of Mercy is wide and absolute,
and can be exercised at any time. Very elaborate
arguments were addressed by him before us on this
aspect of the matter and several English and American
decisions were cited.... In fact we apprehend that
entering into an elaborate discussion about the scope
and effect of the said larger power, in the light of
relevant judicial decisions, is likely to create
confusion and to distract attention from the essential
features of the very narrow point that falls to be
considered in the present case."
(p.519)
It is apparent from these observations that the question of
justiciability has not been affirmed or negatived in the
aforesaid decision.
No power in a republic is irresponsible or
irresponsive, the people in the last resort being the
repositories and beneficiaries of public power. But two
limitations exist in our constitutional system. The Court
cannot intervene everywhere as an omniscient, omnipotent or
omnipresent being. And when the Constitution, as here, has
empowered the nation’s highest Executive, excluding, by
implication, Judicial review, it is officious encroachment,
at once procedurally ultra vires and upsetting comity of
high instrumentalities, for this Court to be a super power
unlimited. The second limitation conditions all public
power. whether a court oversees or no. That trust consists
in the purity of public authorities. All power, however,
majestic the dignitary wielding it, shall be exercised in
good faith, with intelligent and informed care and honestly
for the public weal.
Counsel’s contention that equality is denied in the
matter of sentence where some get the benefit of clemency
while others do not, has no foundation nor is there any
trace of despotism involved in this matter in the case
before us. The court has deliberately awarded death
sentence. The President is expected to, and we are sure
will, consider all facts and circumstances bearing on the
just discharge of his high duty. When the President is the
custodian of the power, the Court makes an almost extreme
presumption in favour of bona fide exercise. We have not
been shown any demonstrable reason or glaring ground to
consider the refusal of commutation in the present case as
motivated by malignity or degraded by abuse of power. We
therefore cannot find our way to interfere with what the
President has done.
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We must however sound a note of caution. Absolute
arbitrary, law-unto-oneself malafide execution of public
power, if gruesomely established, the Supreme Court may not
be silent or impotent. Assuming as proved the case of a
President gripped by communal frenzy and directing
commutation of all the penalties where the convict belongs
to a certain community and refusing outright where the
convict belongs to a different community, there may be, as
Shri Garg urged, a dilemma for the Court. Assuming the
Governor in exercise of his power under Art. 161 refusing to
consider cases of commutation where the prisoner is above 40
years of age as a rule of thumb or arbitrarily out of
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personal vendatta rejecting the claim of clemency of a
condemned prisoner, is the Court helpless ? This large
interrogation is highly hypothetical and whether the remedy
is in Court or by impeachment in Parliament or by rising
resentment in public opinion,, it is not for us to examine
now. Enough unto the day is the evil thereof.
Before parting with this special leave petition-which
we reject-we visualize the contingency of the petitioners
invoking the merciful jurisdiction of the President or
Governor. as the case may be, setting out various factors
with which the Court may not be concerned while imposing
judicial sentence but may still have persuasive value before
the concerned Executive. The rejection of one clemency
petition does not exhaust the power of the President or the
Governor. The circumstances pressed before us about the
political nature of the offence, the undoubted decline in
capital punishment in most countries of the world, the
prospective change in the law bearing on that penalty in the
new Penal Code Bill, the later declaration of law in tune
with modern penology with the correctional and
rehabilitative bias emphasized by this Court in Ediga Anamma
(supra), the circumstances that the Damocle’s sword of death
sentence had been hanging over the head of the convicts for
around 4 years and like factors may, perhaps,, be urged
before the President. Over the centuries, society has moved
away from the crueller forms of inflicting legal death and
almost a revolutionary change in penology has taken place in
England since, in 1801 AD a boy of 13 years old was hanged
for stealing a spoon. Not raw ferocity but warm humanity is
the real heart of law. A recent publication states with
graphic grimness,
" The man sits in a cage of steel and concrete
under a single bright light that burns around the
clock. He has been tried by a jury of his peers, judged
and sentenced to die. He has killed and now society,
through the anonymous machinery of the state, will kill
him. He has been brought here to keep that appointment
with death."
(The Life We Take- A case against the Death Penalty-by
Trevor Thomas-Friends Committee on Legislation, California)
Our reflections on hanging,, our philosophy for mercy and
our observations about death sentence being abolished in
country after country and the irrevocable harm of a wrong
execution-these great facts cannot deflect us from our
constitutional duty not to interfere where we have no
jurisdiction. We accordingly dismiss the special leave
petition.
V.P.S. Petition dismissed.
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