Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 617 of 2001
PETITIONER:
STATE OF MAHARASHTRA AND ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
NAJAKAT ALIA MUBARAK ALI
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 09/05/2001
BENCH:
K.T. Thomas
JUDGMENT:
THOMAS, J.
Leave granted.
L...I...T.......T.......T.......T.......T.......T.......T..J
An accused has been convicted and sentenced to
imprisonment in two criminal cases. As he was arrested on
the same day in connection with both the cases he remained
in jail as an under-trial prisoner during the same period in
both cases. The question mooted in this appeal is this: Is
it permissible for him to claim the benefit of set off
envisaged in Section 428 of the Code of Criminal Procedure
(for short the Code) in both cases? As the High Court of
Bombay has answered the question in the affirmative by the
impugned judgment this appeal is filed by the State of
Maharashtra in challenge of the said view of the High Court.
A two Judge Bench of this Court has made observations in
Raghbir Singh vs. State of Haryana {1984(4) SCC 348} that
on the fact situation in the said case the accused cannot
claim a double benefit. In other words, learned Judges held
that the accused can have the benefit of set off in one of
those cases but not in both. When the said decision was
cited before the High Court, the learned Single Judge who
rendered the impugned judgment has stated that on the facts
in the case of Raghbir Singh (supra) the question in issue
involved here never arose. Learned Judge expressed the view
that the accused is entitled to the benefit of set off in
the second case as well where he was in custody during the
course of the trial. When the special leave petition in
this case came up for consideration on 20.1.2000, we felt
that since Raghbir Singh was decided by a two Judge Bench it
would be appropriate that this matter is heard by a larger
Bench so that a fresh look can be made on Section 428 of the
Code.
As the accused respondent was benefited by the decision
of the High Court he would have been released from jail.
That might be the reason why he did not enter appearance in
this appeal despite notice served on him. So we appointed
Ms. Aparna Bhatt, Advocate, as amicus curiae. She
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presented the case for the accused very effectively after
looking up all the decisions pertaining to the subject. We
are indeed immensely grateful to her and we record our
appreciation for the help rendered by her.
The facts out of which the aforesaid question has
winched to the fore can be stated briefly thus: Respondent
accused was tried in two cases. One was numbered S.C.230 of
1995 and the other as S.C.313 of 1996. He was arrested on
21.9.1995 in connection with both cases. The Sessions Judge
who convicted him in S.C. 230 of 1995 on 3.4.1998, while
sentencing him, directed that the accused would be entitled
to the set off under Section 428 of the Code.
Subsequently a Sessions Court (we are not sure whether
the same Sessions Court or a different one) convicted him in
S.C.323 of 1998 on 23.7.1998 and sentenced him to certain
terms of imprisonment. The Sessions Judge concerned
observed therein that the accused is entitled to the set off
under Section 428 of the Code.
On 14.9.1998 the respondent accused sent an intimation
to the jail authorities that he is entitled to be released
from jail since he has already served the sentences imposed
on him in both cases. But the jail authorities refused to
release him on the premise that he could not claim the
benefit of set off in the second case as he had been given
set off in the first case. The jail authorities did so on
the strength of a Resolution dated 7.9.1974 adopted by the
Government of Maharashtra. That resolution reads thus:
If a prisoner is convicted in different cases, and
different set off period is granted by different courts then
in that case maximum period of set off in one case should be
granted to prisoners, as other set off period will be merged
in the set off which is the maximum.
When the prisoner challenged the decision of the jail
authorities before the High Court learned Single Judge
observed that the construction placed by the authorities on
the said Government Resolution is completely contrary to
the interpretation of Section 428 of the Code and the spirit
of the section itself. Learned Single Judge after ordering
the prisoner to be released forthwith from jail, directed
the Government and the jail authorities to review the cases
of all persons who continue to be in custody based on the
Government Resolution dated 7th September, 1994 within a
period of two months and to take steps to see that they are
released within the said period of two months (if not
earlier released) based on the interpretation to Section 428
as now given.
The respondent prisoner was released by the jail
authorities before the Government of Maharashtra took up the
matter to this Court. The State felt that the High Court
has gone wrong in giving the benefit of Section 428 of the
Code to the prisoner in two cases.
In Raghbir Singh vs. State of Haryana (supra) learned
Judges considered a case in which an accused was convicted
and sentenced to imprisonment for 7 years on 1.2.1980 as per
the judgment rendered by a Sessions Judge, Karnal. That
accused was in judicial custody from 11.1.1980 in connection
with another case which was pending before a Metropolitan
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Magistrate, Delhi. That second case also ended in
conviction and the Metropolitan Magistrate sentenced him to
rigorous imprisonment for one year on 16.2.1981. That
accused claimed set off from 11.1.1980 till the dates of
conviction in each cases. In that case the State conceded
the claim of the accused in respect of the period between
11.1.1980 to 1.2.1980. But the State contended that the
accused could not get set off from 1.2.1980 till 16.2.1981
for the second case. The said contention was based on a
departmental instructions issued by a State Government on
29.11.1975 to the effect that the period of detention
undergone by a convict in execution of a sentence in one
case should not be set off against the term of imprisonment
imposed on him in another case. This Court upheld the said
contention and the two Judge Bench made the following
observation:
In such a case the period of 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.
As the said view is now sought to be reconsidered we
shall examine the position by reading Section 428 of the
Code once again. The Section is extracted below:
Period of detention undergone by the accused to be set
off against the sentence of imprisonment.- Where an accused
person has, on conviction, been sentenced to imprisonment
for a term not being imprisonment in default of payment of
fine, the period of detention, if any, undergone by him
during the investigation, inquiry or trial of the same case
and before the date of such conviction shall be set off
against the term of imprisonment imposed on him on such
conviction, and the liability of such person to undergo
imprisonment on such conviction shall be restricted to the
remainder, if any, of the term of imprisonment imposed on
him.
The placement of that section just below Section 427 of
the Code tempts us to have a peep into the preceding
section, which deals with instances wherein one person is
sentenced in a case when he has already been undergoing the
sentence in another case. The first sub-section of Section
427 says that the sentence in the second conviction shall
commence at the expiration of the imprisonment to which the
accused has been previously sentenced, unless the court
directs that the subsequent sentence shall run concurrently
with such previous sentence. The second sub-section to
Section 427 of the Code says that when a person already
undergoing a sentence of imprisonment for life is sentenced
on a subsequent conviction to imprisonment for a term or
imprisonment for life, the subsequent sentence shall run
concurrently with such previous sentence.
Thus, the sentence of life imprisonment imposed on the
same person in two different convictions would converge into
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one and thereafter it would flow through one stream alone.
Even if the sentence in one of those two cases is not
imprisonment life but only a lessor term the convergence
will take place and the post convergence flow would be
through the same channel. In all other cases, it is left to
the court to decide whether the sentences in two different
convictions should merge into one period or not. If no
order is passed by the court the two sentences would run one
after the other. No doubt Section 427 is intended to
provide amelioration to the prisoner. When such
amelioration is a statutory operation in cases falling under
the second sub-section it is a matter of choice for the
court when the cases fall within the first sub-section.
Nonetheless, the entire section is aimed at providing
amelioration to a prisoner. Thus a penumbra of the
succeeding section can be glimpsed through the former
provision.
The purpose of Section 428 of the Code is also for
advancing amelioration to the prisoner. We may point out
that the section does not contain any indication that if the
prisoner was in jail as an under-trial prisoner in a second
case the benefit envisaged in the section would be denied to
him in respect of the second case. However, learned counsel
for the appellant contended that the words of the same
case in the section would afford sufficient indication that
the benefit is intended to cover only for one case and not
more than that. It must be remembered that the ideology
enshrined in Section 428 was introduced for the first time
only in the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973. For
understanding the contours of the legislative measure
involved in that section, it is advantageous to have a look
at the Objects and Reasons for bringing the above
legislative provision. We therefore extract the same here:
The Committee has noted the distressing fact that in
many cases accused persons are kept in prison for very long
period as under-trial prisoners and in some cases the
sentence of imprisonment ultimately awarded is a fraction of
the period spent in jail as under-trial prisoner. Indeed,
there may even be cases where such a person is acquitted.
No doubt, sometimes courts do take into account the period
of detention undergone as under-trial prisoner when passing
sentence and occasionally the sentence of imprisonment is
restricted to the period already undergone. But this is not
always the case so that in many cases the accused person is
made to suffer jail life for a period out of all proportion
to the gravity of the offence or even to the punishment
provided in the statute. The Committee has also noted that
a large number of persons in the overcrowded jails of today
are under-trial prisoners. The new clause seeks to remedy
this unsatisfactory state of affairs. The new clause
provides for the setting off of the period of detention as
an under-trial prisoner against the sentence of imprisonment
imposed on him. The Committee trusts that the provision
contained in the new clause would go a long way to mitigate
the evil.
(emphasis supplied)
The purpose is therefore clear that the convicted person
is given the right to reckon the period of his sentence of
imprisonment from the date he was in jail as an under-trial
prisoner. In other words, the period of his being in jail
as an under-trial prisoner would be added as a part of the
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period of imprisonment to which he is sentenced. We may now
decipher the two requisites postulated in Section 428 of the
Code.
(1) During the stage of investigation, inquiry or trial
of a particular case the prisoner should have been in jail
at least for a certain period.
(2) He should have been sentenced to a term of
imprisonment in that case.
If the above two conditions are satisfied then the
operative part of the provision comes into play i.e. if the
sentence of imprisonment awarded is longer than the period
of detention undergone by him during the stages of
investigation, inquiry or trial, the convicted person need
undergo only the balance period of imprisonment after
deducting the earlier period from the total period of
imprisonment awarded. The words if any in the section
amplifies that if there is no balance period left after such
deduction the convict will be entitled to be set free from
jail, unless he is required in any other case. In other
words, if the convict was in prison, for whatever reason,
during the stages of investigation, inquiry or trial of a
particular case and was later convicted and sentenced to any
term of imprisonment in that case the earlier period of
detention undergone by him should be counted as part of the
sentence imposed on him.
In the above context it is apposite to point out that
very often it happens when an accused is convicted in one
case under different counts of offences and sentenced to
different terms of imprisonment under each such count, all
such sentences are directed to run concurrently. The idea
behind it is that the imprisonment to be suffered by him for
one count of offence will, in fact and in effect be
imprisonment for other count as well.
Reading Section 428 of the Code in the above
perspective, the words of the same case are not to be
understood as suggesting that the set off is allowable only
if the earlier jail life was undergone by him exclusively
for the case in which the sentence is imposed. The period
during which the accused was in prison subsequent to the
inception of a particular case, should be credited towards
the period of imprisonment awarded as sentence in that
particular case. It is immaterial that the prisoner was
undergoing sentence of imprisonment in another case also
during the said period. The words of the same case were
used to refer to the pre-sentence period of detention
undergone by him. Nothing more can be made out of the
collocation of those words.
Various High Courts have expressed on this question. A
Division Bench of Delhi High Court has dissented from a
contrary view taken by a Single Judge of that High Court and
held in K.C. Das vs. The State (1979 Criminal Law Journal
362) that the statute does not make any distinction between
the first case and the second case for application of
Section 428 of the Code. A Division Bench of the High Court
of Gauhati in Lalrinfela vs. State of Mizoram and ors.
(1982 Criminal Law Journal 1793) has adopted the same view.
Lahiri and Hansaria, JJ, said in the said decision that if
the accused is simultaneously arrested and detained in two
or more cases and on conviction obtains set off for the
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period of his detention in the first case he is not
ineligible to obtain set off for the period in the
subsequent cases; in each case the court is to count the
number of days the accused was in such detention separately
and the liability to undergo imprisonment on conviction
should be restricted to the remainder of the terms of the
imprisonment imposed on him in that case.
A Division Bench of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in
Gedala Ramulu Naidu vs. State of A.P. and anr. (1982
Criminal Law Journal 2186) and a Division Bench of the
Madras High Court in Chinnasamy vs. State of Tamil Nadu and
ors. (1984 Criminal Law Journal 447) have also adopted the
same view in tune with the interpretation given by us.
While speaking for the Division Bench of the Madras High
Natarajan, J (as he then was) has made a survey of most of
the decisions thus far rendered by different High Courts and
opted to flow with the view adopted by all the other High
Courts almost uniformly.
We have no reason to think that the High Courts
mentioned above have gone wrong in taking the view that
Section 428 of the Code permits the accused to have the
period undergone by him in jail as an under-trial prisoner
set off against the period of sentence imposed on him
irrespective of whether he was in jail in connection with
the same case during that period. We therefore,
respectfully dissent from the view expressed by the two
Judge Bench of this Court in Raghbir Singh vs. State of
Haryana (supra).
In the result we dismiss this appeal.