Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Writ Petition (crl.) 284-285 of 2005
PETITIONER:
Epuru Sudhakar & Anr.
RESPONDENT:
Govt. of A.P. & Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 11/10/2006
BENCH:
ARIJIT PASAYAT
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
ARIJIT PASAYAT, J.
Challenge in this writ petition under Article 32 of the
Constitution of India, 1950 (in short the ’Constitution’) is to
the order passed by Government of Andhra Pradesh,
represented by its Principal Secretary whereby Gowru Venkata
Reddy-respondent No.2 was granted remission of unexpired
period of about seven years imprisonment. GOMs. No.170
dated 11.8.2005 in this regard is challenged.
Factual scenario as per petitioners is as follows:
Petitioner No.1 is the son of late Sh. Epuru Chinna
Ramasubbaiah who was murdered along with another person
on 19.10.1995. Petitioner No.2 claims to be the son of one late
Sh. Tirupati Reddy who was allegedly murdered by respondent
No.2 while he was on bail in the murder case of father of
petitioner No.1. In the case relating to the murder of late Sh.
Epuru Chinna Ramasubbaiah and one Ambi Reddy,
respondent No.2 faced trial and ultimately the matter came
before this Court in Criminal Appeal Nos. 519-521 of 2003
which was disposed of by this Court by judgment dated
19.11.2003 and the conviction of respondent No.2 was altered
from one under Section 302 of the Indian Penal Code, 1860 (in
short the ’IPC’) to Section 304(1) read with Section 109 IPC
and custodial sentence of 10 years’ rigorous imprisonment
was imposed. Conviction relating to some other sentences was
maintained. On 28.5.2003, the respondent No.3 wife of
respondent No.2 submitted a representation for grant of parole
to respondent No.2 and on 18.10.2003 parole was granted for
a period of 15 days but the same was cancelled on 30.10.2003
by the State Government in view of the report sent by
Superintendent of Police, Kurnool that on account of
respondent No.2’s release on parole there was a likelihood of
breach of peace and law and order if the respondent No.2
visits Nandikotkur Assembly Constituency. Respondent No.3
contested the election to the Andhra Pradesh Assembly
Election and on 12.5.2004 was elected as member of
Legislative Assembly. On 14.5.2004 she made a representation
for grant of parole to respondent No.2. Same was granted on
19.5.2004 and was extended from time to time. On 18.7.2004
fourth extension for 15 days was granted. On 10.10.2004
respondent No.3 made a representation to respondent No.1
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seeking pardon to respondent No.2 by exercise of power under
Article 161 of the Constitution alleging that he was implicated
in false cases due to political rivalry. On 18.10.2004 during
the pendency of the petition for pardon, one month parole was
granted. On 11.8.2005 the Governor of Andhra Pradesh
purportedly exercised power under Article 161 of the
Constitution and granted remission of the unexpired sentence
of respondent No.2. Director General and Inspector General of
Police (Correction Services) Andhra Pradesh were directed to
take action for release of respondent No.2 and in fact on
12.8.2005 the Superintendent of Central Prison, Cherlapally,
R.R. District directed release of respondent No.2.
The writ petition has been filed inter alia alleging that the
grant of remission (described in the writ petition as grant of
pardon) was illegal, relevant materials were not placed before
the Governor, and without application of mind impugned order
was passed. The recommendations made for grant of
remission were based on irrelevant and extraneous materials.
The factual scenario has not been placed before the Governor
in the proper perspective. The sole basis on which respondent
No.3 asked for pardon was alleged implication in false cases
due to political rivalry. In view of this Court’s judgment
holding the respondent No.2 guilty, the said plea could not
have been even considered as a basis for grant of pardon.
Since the grant of pardon is based on consideration of
irrelevant materials and non-consideration of relevant
materials the same is liable to be set aside.
Learned counsel for the respondent-State and respondent
Nos.2 and 3 has strenuously contended that the petition is the
outcome of a political vendetta. All relevant materials have
been taken into account by the Governor, a high constitutional
authority who passed the order granting remission. It is
submitted that the petitioner has confused between pardon
and remission of sentence. It is a case where materials existed
which warranted the grant of remission and this Court should
not interfere in the matter. Considering the limited scope for
judicial review the writ petition deserves to be dismissed.
Considering the fact that in large number of cases
challenge is made to the grant of pardon or remission, as the
case may be, we had requested Mr. Soli J Sorabjee to act as
Amicus Curiae. He has highlighted various aspects relating to
the grant of pardon and remission, as the case may be, and
the scope for judicial review in such matters. He has suggested
that considering the frequency with which pardons and/or the
remission are being granted, in the present political scenario
of the country it would be appropriate for this Court to lay
down guidelines so that there is no scope for making a
grievance about the alleged misuse of power.
Learned counsel for the respondents on the other hand
submitted that though in Maru Ram v. Union of India &
Others [1981 (1) SCC 107] this Court had indicated certain
recommendatory guidelines, the same did not find acceptance
in Kehar Singh and Another v. Union of India and Another
[1989(1) SCC 204]. As a matter of fact in a later decision in
Ashok Kumar @ Golu v. Union of India and Ors. (1991 (3) SCC
498) the alleged apparent inconsistencies in the view was
highlighted and a 3-Judge Bench held that laying down
guidelines would be inappropriate.
The relevant constitutional provisions regarding the grant
of pardon, remissions, suspension of sentence, etc. by the
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President of India and the Governor of a State are as follows:
"Article 72. Power of President to grant
pardons, etc. and to suspend, remit or
commute sentences in certain cases \027 (1)
The President shall have the power to grant
pardons, reprieves, respites or remissions of
punishment or to suspend, remit or commute
the sentence of any person convicted of any
offence \027
(a) in all cases where the punishment
or sentence is by a Court Martial;
(b) in all cases where the punishment
or sentence is for an offence against
any law relating to a matter to which
the executive power of the Union
extends;
(c) in all cases where the sentence is a
sentence of death.
(2) Nothing in sub-clause (a) of clause (1) shall
affect the power conferred by law on any
officer of the Armed Forces of the Union to
suspend, remit or commute a sentence
passed by a Court Martial.
(3) Nothing in sub-clause (c) of clause (1) shall
affect the power to suspend, remit or
commute a sentence of death exercisable by
the Governor of a State under any law for the
time being in force."
"Article 161 Power of Governor to grant
pardons, etc., and to suspend, remit or
commute sentences in certain cases \026 The
Governor of a State shall have the power to
grant pardons, reprieves, respites or
remissions of punishment or to suspend,
remit or commute the sentence of any person
convicted of any offence against any law
relating to a matter to which the executive
power of the State extends."
The provision corresponding to Article 72 in the
Government of India Act 1935 (in short ’the Government Act’)
was Section 295 which reads as follows:
"(1) Where any person has been sentenced to
death in a Province, the Governor-General in
his discretion shall have all such powers of
suspension, remission or commutation of
sentence as were vested in the Governor-
General in Council immediately before the
commencement of Part III of this Act, but save
as aforesaid no authority in India outside a
Province shall have any power to suspend,
remit or commute the sentence of any person
convicted in the Province.
Provided that nothing in this sub-section
affects any powers of any officer of His
Majesty’s forces to suspend, remit or
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commute a sentence passed by a Court-
Martial.
(2) Nothing in this Act shall derogate from the
right of His Majesty, or of the Governor-
General, if any such right is delegated to him
by His Majesty, to grant pardons, reprieves,
respites or remissions of punishment."
There was no provision in the Government Act
corresponding to Article 161 of the Constitution.
The above constitutional provisions were debated in the
Constituent Assembly on 29th December 1948 and 17th
September 1949 [see Constituent Assembly Debates, Vol.7,
pages 1118-1120 and Vol. 10, page 389]. The grounds and
principles on which these powers should be exercised were
neither discussed nor debated [See Framing of India’s
Constitution: A Study, 2" Edition, Dr. Subhash C Kashyap,
pages 367-371 , pages 397-399].
In addition to the above constitutional provisions the
Code of Criminal Procedure 1973 (in short ’Cr.P.C.’) provides
for power to suspend or remit sentences and the power to
commute sentence in Section 432 and Section 433
respectively.
Section 433A lays down restrictions on provisions of
remission or commutation in certain cases mentioned therein.
Section 434 confers concurrent power on the Central
Government in case of death sentence.
Section 435 provides that the power of the State
Government to remit or commute a sentence where the
sentence is in respect of certain offences specified therein will
be exercised by the State Government only after consultation
with the Central Government.
Sections 54 and 55 of IPC confer power on the
appropriate Government to commute sentence of death or
sentence of imprisonment for life as provided therein.
Sections 432 and 433 Cr.P.C. read as follows:
"432. Power to suspend or remit
sentences.\027( I) When any person has been
sentenced to punishment for an offence, the
appropriate Government may, at any time,
without conditions or upon any conditions
which the person sentenced accepts, suspend
the execution of his sentence or remit the
whole or any part of the punishment to which
he has been sentenced.
(2) Whenever an application is made to the
appropriate Government for the suspension or
remission of a sentence, the appropriate
Government may require the presiding Judge
of the Court before or by which the conviction
was had or confirmed, to state his opinion as
to whether the application should be granted
or refused, together with his reasons for such
opinion and also to forward with the
statement of such opinion a certified copy of
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the record of the trial or of such record
thereof as exists.
(3) If any condition on which a sentence has
been suspended or remitted is, in the opinion
of the appropriate Government, not fulfilled,
the appropriate Government may cancel the
suspension or remission, and thereupon the
person in whose favour the sentence has been
suspended or remitted may. if at large, be
arrested by any police officer, without warrant
and remanded to undergo the unexpired
portion of the sentence.
(4) The condition on which a sentence is
suspended or remitted under this section may
be one to be fulfilled by the person in whose
favour the sentence is suspended or remitted,
or one independent of his will.
(5) The appropriate Government may. by
general rules or special orders, give directions
as to the suspension of sentences and the
conditions on which petitions should be
presented and dealt with:
Provided that in the case of any sentence
(other than a sentence of fine ) passed on a
male person above the age of eighteen years, no
such petition by the person sentenced or by
other person on his behalf shall be entertained,
unless the person sentenced is in jail and,-
(a) where such petition is made by the person
sentenced, it is presented through the officer
in charge of the jail; or
(b) where such petition is made by any other
person it contains a declaration that the
person sentenced is in jail.
(6) The provisions of the above sub-sections
shall also apply to any order passed by a
Criminal Court under any section of this Code
or of any other law which restricts the liberty
of any person or imposes any liability upon
him or his property.
(7) In this section and in section 433, the
expression "appropriate Government" means,-
(a) in cases where the sentence is for an
offence against, or the order referred to in
sub-section (6) is passed under, any law
relating to a matter to which the executive
power of the Union extends, the Central
Government;
(b) in other cases the Government of the State
within which the offender is sentenced or the
said order is passed.
433. Power to commute sentence._The
appropriate Government may, without the
consent of the person sentenced, commute-
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(a) a sentence of death, for any other
punishment provided by the Indian Penal Code
(45 of l860);
(b) a sentence of imprisonment for life, for
imprisonment for a term not exceeding
fourteen years or for fine;
(c) a sentence of rigorous imprisonment for
simple imprisonment for any term to which
that person might have been sentenced, or for
fine;
(d) a sentence of simple imprisonment for fine".
The philosophy underlying the pardon power is that
"every civilized country recognizes, and has therefore provided
for, the pardoning power to be exercised as an act of grace and
humanity in proper cases. Without such a power of clemency,
to be exercised by some department or functionary of a
government, a country would be most imperfect and deficient
in its political morality, and in that attribute of Deity whose
judgments are always tempered with mercy." [See 59 American
Jurisprudence 2d, page 5].
The rationale of the pardon power has been felicitously
enunciated by the celebrated Justice Holmes of the United
States Supreme Court in the case of Biddle v. Perovich in
these words [71 L. Ed. 1161 at 1163]:
"A pardon in our days is not a private act of
grace from an individual happening to
possess power. It is a part of the
constitutional scheme. When granted, it is the
determination of the ultimate authority that
the public welfare will be better served by
inflicting less than what the judgment fixed."
(emphasis added)
"Pardon and Parole" as per Corpus Juris Secundum
(Vol.67-A) reads as follows: (Pages 16 and 17)
"The pardoning power is founded on
considerations of the public good, and is to
be exercised on the ground that the public
welfare, which is the legitimate object of all
punishment, will be as well promoted by a
suspension as by an execution of the
sentence. It may also be used to the end that
justice be done by correcting injustice, as
where after-discovered facts convince the
official or board invested with the power that
there was no guilt or that other mistakes were
made in the operation or enforcement of the
criminal law. Executive clemency also exists
to afford relief from undue harshness in the
operation or enforcement of criminal law."
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Interests of society and convict
(1) Acts of leniency by pardon are administered
by the executive branch of the government in
the interests of society and the discipline,
education, and reformation of the person
convicted. III- People v. Nowak, 35, N.E. 2d 63,
387 III, II.
(2) A pardon is granted on the theory that the
convict has seen the error of his ways, that
society will gain nothing by his further
confinement and that he will conduct himself
in the future as an upright, law-abiding citizen.
Matter known to counsel
The pardoning power is set up to prevent
injustice to a person who has been convicted,
especially when the facts of such injustice were
not properly produced in the trial court, but
such power is not a proper remedy on account
of failure to use any matter which was known
to defendant or his counsel and was available
at time of new trial motion.
Showing that convection was on perjured
testimony
"Pardon and Parole" as stated in AMERICAN
JURISPRUDENCE (Second Edition) (Volume 59) reads as
follows:
I. INTRODUCTORY
1. History of pardoning power.
Every civilized country recognizes, and has
therefore provided for, the pardoning power to
be exercised as an act of grace and humanity
in proper cases. Without such a power of
clemency, to be exercised by some
department or functionary of a Government, a
country would be most imperfect and
deficient in its political morality, and in that
attribute of Deity whose judgments are always
tempered with mercy. In England, this power
has been exercised from time immemorial,
and has always been regarded as a necessary
attribute of sovereignty. In the United States,
this power is extended to the President by the
United States Constitution, and in the various
states and territories it is either conferred by
constitutional provision or organic act, or
provided for by statute, the power usually
being conferred upon the governor or upon a
board of which the governor is a member. In
some instances, however, the governor’s
power is so limited as to render an arbitrary
exercise impossible.
2. Validity of contract to procure pardon;
criminal liability. While the earlier cases
uniformly held agreements to secure a
pardon, parole, or commutation of sentence
illegal irrespective of the services rendered or
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contemplated, the more recent decisions take
the view that such contracts are valid or
invalid according to the character of the
services contemplated. Although there is
some conflict of opinion, contracts entered
into to obtain a pardon, parole, or
commutation of sentence have generally been
upheld where the services contemplated are
not other than the proper presentation of the
case before the pardoning power."
Reprieve
A reprieve, from the French word "reprendre,"
to take back, is the withdrawing of a sentence
for an interval of time, whereby the execution
is suspended. It is merely the postponement
of the execution of a sentence for a definite
time, or to a day certain. It does not and
cannot defeat the ultimate execution of the
judgment of the court, but merely delays it
temporarily. Reprieves at common law are of
three kinds:
1. ex mandato regis, from the mere pleasure
of the Crown;
2. ex arbitrio judicis, the power to grant which
belongs of common right to every tribunal
which is invested with authority to award
execution; and
3. ex necessitate legis, required by law to be
granted under certain circumstances, as
when a woman convicted of a capital offence
alleges pregnancy of a quick child in delay of
execution, or when a prisoner has become
insane between the time of sentence and the
time fixed for execution.
In Sir William Wades’ Administrative Law (Ninth Edition)
the position relating to pardon is stated as follows:
"The royal prerogative
The prerogative powers of the Crown have
traditionally been said to confer discretion
which no court can question; and there was
long a dearth of authority to the contrary. But
it may be that this was because the decided
cases involved discretions which are, as has
been laid down in the House of Lords,
inherently unsuitable for judicial review,
’such as those relating to the making of
treaties, the defence of the realm, the
prerogative of mercy, the grant of honours,
the dissolution of Parliament and the
appointment of ministers as well as others’.
But at the same time the House of Lords held
that the court could review a ministers action
(forbidding trade union membership by
certain civil servants) under authority
delegated to him by prerogative Order in
Council, so that the principles of natural
justice would apply. Administrative action
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was held to be reviewable in proceedings
against the responsible minister without
distinction as to the origin of the power,
whether statute or common law. In later
cases it was held that the dismissal of a civil
servant involved ’a sufficient public law
element’ to be subject to Judicial review and
that an unfair compensation award by the
civil service appeal board should be quashed.
So now it may be said that the royal
prerogative does not per se confer
unreviewable discretion, but that many of the
powers contained in it will be of a kind with
which the courts will not concern themselves.
It may be the prerogative acts of the Crown
itself, though taken on the advice of ministers
are immune from review, whereas the action
of ministers, though authorised by delegation
of prerogative power, is reviewable.But this is
an artificial distinction, and if the case were
strong enough even an Order in Council
might prove to be reviewable in a declaratory
judgment.
These propositions are founded on the
wide definition of prerogative which has been
criticized earlier. The making of treaties, for
example, has no effect on the law of this
country, so that there is no exercise of power
which can concern the courts. It might be
called prerogative without power, while the
employment of civil servants might be called
power without prerogative. A case where there
may be neither prerogative nor power is the
grant and refusal of passports, which has
been claimed to be wholly within the
prerogative and discretion of the Crown. A
passport is merely an administrative device,
the grant or cancellation of which probably
involves no direct legal consequences, since
there appears to be no justification for
supposing that, in law as opposed to
administrative practice, a Citizen’s right to
leave or enter the country is dependent upon
the possession of a passport. The arbitrary
power claimed by the Crown has now been
made subject to judicial review along with
various other non-legal powers discussed
later. Other countries were ahead of Britain
in protecting this necessary civil right.
At least it is now judicially recognised
that prerogative power is as capable of abuse
as is any other power, and that the law can
sometimes find means of controlling it. The
prerogative has many times been restricted
both by judicial decision and by statute. It is
for the court to determine the legal limits of
the prerogative, and they may include the
same requirement of reasonable and proper
exercise as applies to statutory powers\027
though with this difference, that it cannot be
based upon the presumed intention of
Parliament. In one unusual case, where a
Parliamentary basis could be found because
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action taken by a minister under a treaty was
held to be impliedly prohibited by a statute,"
Lord Denning MR discussed the nature of the
prerogative and said:
Seeing that the prerogative is a
discretionary power to be exercised
for the public good, it follows that its
exercise can be examined by the
courts just as any other
discretionary power which is vested
in the executive.
Then after citing cases of abuse of statutory
power he concluded:
Likewise it seems to me that when
discretionary powers are entrusted
to the executive by the prerogative\027
in pursuance of the treaty-making
power\027the courts can examine the
exercise of them so as to see that
they are not used improperly or
mistakenly.
Although this last remark was said in the
House of Lords to be ’far too wide’, in today’s
atmosphere it seems clear that the court
would entertain a complaint that, for
example, a royal pardon had been obtained by
fraud or granted by mistake or for improper
reasons. The High Court has gone so far as to
review a decision of the Home Secretary not to
recommend a posthumous free pardon for a
youth hanged for murder forty years
previously, on the ground that he considered
only an unconditional pardon and failed to
take account of other possibilities. Although
the court made no order or declaration and
merely invited the Home Secretary to look at
the matter again, it clearly took a long step
towards judicial review of the prerogative of
mercy. For example it was clear that the
Home Secretary had refused to pardon
someone solely on the ground of their sex,
race or religion, the courts would be expected
to interfere and our judgment would be
entitled to do so.
In New Zealand the Court of Appeal has
held that the prerogative power of pardon is
not reviewable ’at any rate at present’, but
that the position might change justice so
required; that the prerogative character of the
power did not exempt it from review; but that
the existing legal and administrative
safeguards were adequate so that an
extension of judicial review was unnecessary.
A further question is whether the law
should concern itself with the Crown’s
exercise of the ordinary powers and liberties
which all persons possess, as in the making
of contracts and the conveyance of land. It
has hitherto been assumed that in this area
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the Crown has the same free discretion as has
any other person. But where such powers are
exercised for governmental purposes it is
arguable that the courts should be prepared
to intervene, as a matter of public ethics, as a
safeguard against abuse. They do not allow
local authorities to act arbitrarily or
vindictively in evicting tenants, letting sports
grounds or placing advertisements, for
example. Those are technically statutory
powers (since all local authorities are
statutory), but they correspond to ordinary
powers and liberties. If, as the House of Lords
holds, the source of power is irrelevant, it
would not seem impossible for judicial review
to be extended to this ’third source’ of public
power which is neither statutory nor
prerogative but is a remnant from the days of
personal government. But the ’grotesquely
undemocratic idea that public authorities
have a private capacity is deeply embedded in
our legal culture’, and such judicial authority
as there is, is not encouraging.
We shall deal with the extent of power for judicial review
as highlighted by learned counsel for the parties and learned
Amicus Curie before we deal with the factual scenario.
It is fairly well settled that the exercise or non-exercise of
pardon power by the President or Governor, as the case may
be, is not immune from judicial review. Limited judicial review
is available in certain cases.
In Maru Ram’s case (supra) it was held that all public
power, including constitutional power, shall never be
exercisable arbitrarily or mala fide and, ordinarily, guidelines
for fair and equal execution are guarantors of the valid play of
power.
It is noteworthy that in Kehar Singh’s case (supra) the
contention that the power of pardon can be exercised for
political consideration was unequivocally rejected. In Maru
Ram’s case (supra) it was held that consideration of religion,
caste, colour or political loyalty are totally irrelevant and
fraught with discrimination.
In Kehar Singh’s case (supra) it was held that the order of
the President cannot be subjected to judicial review on its
merits except within the strict limitations delineated in Maru
Ram’s case (supra). The function of determining whether the
act of a constitutional or statutory functionary falls within the
constitutional or legislative conferment of power, or is vitiated
by self-denial on an erroneous appreciation of the full
amplitude of the power is a matter for the court.
In Kehar Singh’s case (supra), placing reliance on the
doctrine of the division (separation) of powers it was pleaded,
that it was not open to the judiciary to scrutinize the exercise
of the "mercy" power. In dealing with this submission this
Court held that the question as to the area of the President’s
power under Article 72 falls squarely within the judicial
domain and can be examined by the court by way of judicial
review.
As regards the considerations to be applied to a petition
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for pardon/remission in Kehar Singh’s case (supra) this Court
observed as follows:
"As regards the considerations to be applied by
the President to the petition, we need say
nothing more as the law in this behalf has
already been laid down by this Court in Maru
Ram."
In the case of Swaran Singh v. State of U.P. [1998 (4)
SCC 75] after referring to the judgments in the cases of Maru
Ram’s case (supra) and Kehar Singh’s case (supra) this Court
held as follows:
"we cannot accept the rigid contention of the
learned counsel for the third respondent that
this court has no power to touch the order
passed by the Governor under Article 161 of
the Constitution. If such power was exercised
arbitrarily, mala fide or in absolute disregard of
the finer canons of the constitutionalism, the
by-product order cannot get the approval of law
and in such cases, the judicial hand must be
stretched to it."
The factual scenario in Swaran Singh’s case (supra)
needs to be noted. One Doodh Nath was found guilty of
murdering one Joginder Singh and was convicted to
imprisonment for life. His appeals to the High Court and
Special Leave Petition to this Court were unsuccessful.
However, within a period of less than 2 years the Governor of
Uttar Pradesh granted remission of the remaining long period
of his life sentence. This Court quashed the said order of the
Governor on the ground that when the Governor was not
posted with material facts, the Governor was apparently
deprived of the opportunity to exercise the powers in a fair and
just manner. Conversely, the impugned order, it was observed
"fringes on arbitrariness".
The Court held that if the pardon power "was exercise
arbitrarily, mala fide or in absolute disregard of the finer
canons of the constitutionalism, the by-product order cannot
get the approval of law and in such cases, the judicial hand
must be stretched to it". The Court further observed that
when the order of the Governor impugned in these proceedings
is subject to judicial review within the strict parameters laid
down in Maru Ram’s case (supra) and reiterated in Kehar
Singh’s case (supra): "we feel that the Governor shall
reconsider the petition of Doodh Nath in the light of those
materials which he had no occasion to know earlier.", and left
it open to the Governor of Uttar Pradesh to pass a fresh order
in the light of the observations made by this Court.
In the case of Satpal and Anr. v. State of Haryana and
Ors. [2000 (5) SCC 170], this Court observed that the power of
granting pardon under Article 161 is very wide and does not
contain any limitation as to the time at which and the
occasion on which and the circumstances in which the said
powers could be exercised.
Thereafter the Court held as follows:
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"\005the said power being a constitutional
power conferred upon the Governor by the
Constitution is amenable to judicial review on
certain limited grounds. The Court, therefore,
would be justified in interfering with an order
passed by the Governor in exercise of power
under Article 161 of the Constitution if the
Governor is found to have exercised the power
himself without being advised by the
Government or if the Governor transgresses
the jurisdiction in exercising the same or it is
established that the Governor has passed the
order without application of mind or the order
in question is mala fide one or the Governor
has passed the order on some extraneous
consideration."
The principles of judicial review on the pardon power have
been re-stated in the case of Bikas Chatterjee v. Union of lndia
[2004 (7) SCC 634].
In Mansukhlal Vithaldas Chauhan v. State of Gujarat
1997 (7) SCC 622 it was inter-alia held as follows:
"25. This principle was reiterated in Tata
Cellular v. Union of India (1994 (6) SCC 651
in which it was, inter alia, laid down that the
Court does not sit as a court of appeal but
merely reviews the manner in which the
decision was made particularly as the Court
does not have the expertise to correct the
administrative decision. If a review of the
administrative decision is permitted, it will be
substituting its own decision which itself may
be fallible. The Court pointed out that the
duty of the Court is to confine itself to the
question of legality. Its concern should be:
1. Whether a decision-making authority
exceeded its powers?;
2. committed an error of law;
3. committed a breach of the rules of
natural justice;
4. reached a decision which no
reasonable tribunal would have reached;
or
5. abused its powers.
26. In this case, Lord Denning was quoted as
saying: (SCC pp. 681-82, para 83)
"Parliament often entrusts the decision of
a matter to a specified person or body,
without providing for any appeal. It may
be a judicial decision, or a quasi-judicial
decision, or an administrative decision.
Sometimes Parliament says its decision is
to be final. At other times it says nothing
about it. In all these cases the courts will
not themselves take the place of the body
to whom Parliament has entrusted the
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decision. The courts will not themselves
embark on a rehearing of the matter. See
Healey v. Minister of Health (1955 (1) QB
221)."
27. Lord Denning further observed as under:
(p. 682)
"If the decision-making body is influenced
by considerations which ought not to
influence it; or fails to take into account
matters which it ought to take into
account, the court will interfere. See
Padfield vs. Minister of Agriculture,
Fisheries and Food (1968 AC 997).
(emphasis supplied)"
28. In Sterling Computers Ltd. v. M&N
Publications Ltd. ((1993 (1) SCC 445) it was
pointed out that while exercising the power of
judicial review, the Court is concerned
primarily as to whether there has been any
infirmity in the decision-making process? In
this case, the following passage from
Professor Wade’s Administrative Law was
relied upon: (SCC p. 457, para 17)
"The doctrine that powers must be
exercised reasonably has to be
reconciled with the no less important
doctrine that the court must not
usurp the discretion of the public
authority which Parliament appointed
to take the decision. Within the
bounds of legal reasonableness is the
area in which the deciding authority
has genuinely free discretion. If it
passes those bounds, it acts ultra
vires. The court must therefore resist
the temptation to draw the bounds
too tightly, merely according to its
own opinion. It must strive to apply
an objective standard which leaves to
the deciding authority the full range
of choices which legislature is
presumed to have intended."
(emphasis supplied)
29. It may be pointed out that this principle
was also applied by Professor Wade to quasi-
judicial bodies and their decisions. Relying
upon decision in R. v. Justices of
London(1895 1 QB 214). Professor Wade laid
down the principle that where a public
authority was given power to determine
matter, mandamus would not lie to compel it
to reach some particular decision.
30. A Division Bench of this Court comprising
Kuldip Singh and B.P. Jeevan Reddy, JJ. in
U.P. Financial Corpn. v. Gem Cap (India) (P)
Ltd. (1993 (2) SCC 299) observed as under:
(SCC pp. 306-07, para 11)
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"11. The obligation to act fairly on
the part of the administrative
authorities was evolved to ensure
the rule of law and to prevent
failure of justice. This doctrine is
complementary to the principles of
natural justice which the quasi-
judicial authorities are bound to
observe. It is true that the
distinction between a quasi-
judicial and the administrative
action has become thin, as pointed
out by this Court as far back as
1970 in A.K. Kraipak v. Union of
India (1969 (2) SCC 262). Even so
the extent of judicial
scrutiny/judicial review in the case
of administrative action cannot be
larger than in the case of quasi-
judicial action. If the High Court
cannot sit as an appellate
authority over the decisions and
orders of quasi-judicial authorities
it follows equally that it cannot do
so in the case of administrative
authorities. In the matter of
administrative action, it is well
known, more than one choice is
available to the administrative
authorities; they have a certain
amount of discretion available to
them. They have ’a right to choose
between more than one possible
course of action upon which there
is room for reasonable people to
hold differing opinions as to which
is to be preferred’. (Lord Diplock in
Secy. of State for Education and
Science v. Tameside Metropolitan
Borough Council 1977 AC 1014 at
p.1064.) The Court cannot
substitute its judgment for the
judgment of administrative
authorities in such cases. Only
when the action of the
administrative authority is so
unfair or unreasonable that no
reasonable person would have
taken that action, can the Court
intervene." (emphasis supplied)
The position, therefore, is undeniable that judicial review
of the order of the President or the Governor under Article 72
or Article 161, as the case may be, is available and their
orders can be impugned on the following grounds:
(a) that the order has been passed without
application of mind;
(b) that the order is mala fide;
(c) that the order has been passed on
extraneous or wholly irrelevant
considerations;
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(d) that relevant materials have been kept out
of consideration;
(e) that the order suffers from arbitrariness
Two important aspects were also highlighted by learned
Amicus Curiae; one relating to the desirability of indicating
reasons in the order granting pardon/remission while the
other was an equally more important question relating to
power to withdraw the order of granting pardon/remission, if
subsequently, materials are placed to show that certain
relevant materials were not considered or certain materials of
extensive value were kept out of consideration. According to
learned Amicus Curiae, reasons are to be indicated, in the
absence of which the exercise of judicial review will be
affected.
So far as desirability to indicate guidelines is concerned
in Ashok Kumar’s case (supra) it was held as follows :
"17- In Kehar Singh’s case (supra) on the
question of laying down guidelines for the
exercise of power under Article 72 of the
constitution this Court observed in paragraph
16 as under: (SCC pp. 217-18, para 16)
"It seems to us that there is
sufficient indication in the terms of
Article 72 and in the history of the
power enshrined in that provision as
well as existing case law, and
specific guidelines need not be
spelled out. Indeed, it may not be
possible to lay down any precise,
clearly defined and sufficiently
channelised guidelines, for we must
remember that the power under
Article 72 is of the widest amplitude,
can contemplate a myriad kinds and
categories of cases with facts and
situations varying from case to case,
in which the merits and reasons of
State may be profoundly assist by
prevailing occasion and passing
time. And it is of great significance
that the function itself enjoys high
status in the constitutional
scheme".
These observations do indicate that the
Constitution Bench which decided Kehar
Singh’s case (supra) was of the view that the
language of Article 72 itself provided sufficient
guidelines for the exercise of power and
having regard to its wide amplitude and the
status of the function to be discharged
thereunder, it was perhaps unnecessary to
spell out specific guidelines since such
guidelines may not be able to conceive of all
myriads kinds and categories of cases which
may come up for the exercise of such power.
No doubt in Maru Ram’s case (supra) the
Constitution Bench did recommend the
framing of guidelines for the exercise of power
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under Articles 72/161 of the Constitution.
But that was a mere recommendation and not
ratio decidendi having a binding effect on the
Constitution Bench which decided Kehar
Singh’s case (supra). Therefore, the
observation made by the Constitution Bench
in Kehar Singh’s case (supra) does not
upturn any ratio laid down in Maru Ram’s
case(supra). Nor has the Bench in Kehar
Singh"s case (supra) said any thing with
regard to using the provisions of extant
Remission Rules as guidelines for the exercise
of the clemency powers."
In Kehar Singh’s case (supra) this Court held that:
"There is no question involved in the case of
asking for reasons for the Presidents’ Order".
The same obviously means that the affected party need
not be given the reasons. The question whether reasons can or
cannot be disclosed to the Court when the same is challenged
was not the subject matter of consideration. In any event, the
absence of any obligation to convey the reasons does not mean
that there should not be legitimate or relevant reasons for
passing the order.
In S.R. Bommai and Ors. v. Union of India and Ors.
(1994 (3) SCC 1) in the context of exercise of power under
Article 356 of the Constitution it was observed at page 109,
para 87 as follows:
"When the Proclamation is challenged by
making out a prima facie case with regard to
its invalidity, the burden would be on the
Union Government to satisfy that there exists
material which showed that the Government
could not be carried on in accordance with
the provision of the Constitution. Since such
material would be exclusively within the
knowledge of the Union Government, in view
of the provision of Section 106 of the Evidence
Act, the burden on proving the existence of
such material would be on the Union
Government."
The position if the Government chooses not to disclose
the reasons or the material for the impugned action was stated
in the words of Lord Upjohn in the landmark decision in
Padfield and Ors. v. Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and
Food and Ors. (1968 (1) All E.R. 694) at p.719:
"\005if he does not give any reason for his
decision it may be, if circumstances warrant
it, that a court may be at liberty to come to
the conclusion that he had no good reason for
reaching that conclusion.."
The same approach was adopted by Justice Rustam S.
Sidhwa of the Lahore High Court in Muhammad Sharif v.
Federation of Pakistan (PLD 1988 Lah 725) where at p.775
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para 13 the learned Judge observed as follows:
"I have no doubt that both the Governments
are not compelled to disclose all the reasons
they may have when dissolving the
Assemblies under Articles 58 (2)(b) and
112(2)(b). If they do not choose to disclose all
the material, but only some, it is their pigeon,
for the case will be decided on a judicial
scrutiny of the limited material placed before
the Court and if it happens to be totally
irrelevant or extraneous, they must suffer."
Justice Sidhwa’s aforesaid observations have been
referred to and approved in S.R. Bommai’s case (supra).
Since there is a power of judicial review, however, limited
it may be, the same can be rendered to be an exercise in
futility in the absence of reasons.
The logic applied by this Court in Bommai’s case (supra)
in the context of Article 74(2) is also relevant. It was observed
in paras 153 and 434 as follows:
"153-Article 74(2) is not a bar against the
scrutiny of the material on the basis of which
the President had arrived at his satisfaction.
434- Article 74(2) merely bars an enquiry into
the question whether any and if so, what
advice was tendered by the Ministers to the
President. It does not bar the court from
calling upon the Union Council of Ministers
(Union of India) to disclose to the court the
material upon which the President had
formed the requisite satisfaction. The material
on the basis of which advice was tendered
does not become part of the advice. Even if
the material is looked into by or shown to the
President, it does not partake the character of
advice."
So far as the second aspect relating to withdrawal is
concerned, it is submitted that though there is no specific
reference in this regard in either Article 72 or Article 161 of
the Constitution yet by application of the provisions of the
General Clauses Act, 1897 (in short the ’General Clauses Act’)
the same would be permissible. It is also highlighted that
similar provisions are specifically provided in Sections 432 and
433 Cr.P.C. Merely because Article 72 and Article 161 of the
Constitution have not been so provided specifically that would
not mean that such power was not intended to be exercised.
Sections 14 and 21 of the General Clauses Act deal with
powers conferred to be exercisable from time to time and a
power to issue, to include power to add to, amend, vary or
rescind notifications, orders, rules or bye-laws. They read as
follows:
"14. Powers conferred to be exercisable from
time to time- (1) Where, by any Central Act or
Regulation made after the commencement of
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this Act, any power is conferred then unless a
different intention appears that power may be
exercised from time to time as occasion
requires.
(2) This section applies also to all Central Acts
and Regulations made on or after the
fourteenth day of January, 1887.
21. Power to issue, to include power to add to,
amend, vary or rescind notifications, orders,
rules or bye-laws- Where, by any Central Act or
Regulation, a power to issue notifications
orders, rules or bye-laws is conferred, then that
power includes a power, exercisable in the like
manner and subject to the like sanction and
conditions (if any), to add to, amend, vary or
rescind any notifications, orders, rules or bye-
laws so issued."
The scope and ambit of Sections 14 and 21 of the
General Clauses Act have been analysed by this Court in
Sampat Prakash v. State of J & K (AIR 1970 SC 1118). It was
inter alia held in para 11 as follows:
"11 - This provision is clearly a rule of
interpretation which has been made
applicable to the Constitution in the same
manner as it applied to any Central Act or
Regulation. On the face of it, the submission
that Section 21 cannot be applied to the
interpretation of the Constitution will lead to
anomalies which can only be avoided by
holding that the rule laid down in this section
is fully applicable to all provisions of the
Constitution."
Section 432 (3) of Cr.P.C. reads as follows:
"If any condition on which a sentence
has been suspended or remitted is, in the
opinion of the appropriate Government, not
fulfilled, the appropriate Government may,
cancel the suspension or remission, and
thereupon the person in whose favour the
sentence has been suspended or remitted
may, if at large, be arrested by any police
officer, without warrant and remanded to
undergo the unexpired portion of the
sentence."
The position in U.S.A. is summed up in Volume 67A Corpus
Juris Secundum, p.21 para 16 as follows:
"There is authority for the view that a
pardon may be held void where it appears from
the pardon that the pardoning power was
misinformed; but there is also authority for the
view that intentional falsehood or suppression
of truth is necessary, and that misinformation
given in good faith and in the belief in its truth
is insufficient to avoid a pardon\005.A pardon
procured by false and fraudulent
representations or by intentional suppression
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of the truth is void, even though the person
pardoned had no part in perpetrating the
fraud."
Inevitable conclusion, therefore, is that if it comes to the
knowledge of the Government that the pardon has been
obtained on the basis of manifest mistake or patent
misrepresentation or fraud, the same can be rescinded or
cancelled.
In R. v. Secretary of State for the Home Department, ex
parte Bentley (1993 (4) All E.R. 442) it was held:
"(1) The court had jurisdiction to review the
exercise of the royal prerogative of mercy by
the Home Secretary in accord with accepted
public law principles since the exercise of the
prerogative was an important feature of the
criminal justice system and a decision by the
Home Secretary which was infected with legal
errors ought not to be immune from legal
challenge merely because it involved an
element of policy or was made under the
prerogative.
(2) The Home Secretary’s decision not to
recommend a posthumous pardon for the
applicant’s brother was flawed because, in
considering whether to grant a posthumous
pardon, he had failed to recognise the fact
that the prerogative of mercy was capable of
being exercised in many different
circumstances and over a wide range and had
failed to consider the form of pardon which
might be appropriate. Furthermore, there was
no objection in principle to the grant of a
posthumous conditional pardon where a
death sentence had already been carried out,
as the grant of such a pardon represented
recognition by the state that a mistake had
been made and that a reprieve should have
been granted. Since the Home Secretary’s
failure to consider the grant of a posthumous
conditional pardon when the previous Home
Secretary’s decision not to grant a reprieve
had been clearly wrong amounted to an error
of law, the court, while making no order on
the application, would invite the Home
Secretary to reconsider his decision.
At page 452 of the Reports it was held as follows:
"The Court of Appeal (Cooke P, Gauk and
McKay JJ) dismissed the appeal but in doing
so it said ([1992] 3 NZLR 672 at 678, 681):
’The prerogative of mercy is a prerogative power
in the strictest sense of that term, for it is
peculiar to the Crown and its exercise directly
affects the rights of persons. On the other hand
it would be inconsistent with the contemporary
approach to say that, merely because it is a pure
and strict prerogative power, its exercise or non-
exercise must be immune from curial challenge.
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There is nothing heterodox in asserting, as
counsel for the appellant do, that the rule of law
requires that challenge shall be permitted in so
far as issues arise of a kind with which the
Courts are competent to deal \005\005... In the end
the issue must turn on weighing the competing
considerations, a number of which we have
stated. Probably it cannot be said that any one
answer is necessarily right; it is more a matter of
a value or conceptual judgment as to the place
in the law and the effectiveness or otherwise of
the prerogative of mercy at the present day. In
attempting such a judgment it must be right to
exclude any lingering thought that the
prerogative of mercy is no more than an
arbitrary monarchial right of grace and favour.
As developed it has become an integral element
in the criminal justice system, a constitutional
safeguard against mistakes.’
xx xx xx xx
"Mr Pannick relies on this passage. He argues
that the prerogative of mercy is exercised by
the Home Secretary on behalf of us all. It is an
important feature of our criminal justice
system. It would be surprising and regrettable
in our developed state of public law were the
decision of the Home Secretary to be immune
from legal challenge irrespective of the gravity
of the legal errors which infected such a
decision. Many types of decisions made by the
Home Secretary do involve an element of policy
(eg parole) but are subject to review.
We accept these arguments, The CCSU case made
it clear that the powers of the court cannot be
ousted merely by invoking the word ’prerogative’,
The question is simply whether the nature and
subject matter of the decision is amenable to the
judicial process".
In "JUDICIAL REVIEW OF ADMINISTRATIVE ACTION"
(Fifth Edition) by the Retired Hon’ble the Lord Woolf it has
been noted as follows:
"Other former prerogative powers should not
any more, however, automatically be assumed
to be non-justiciable. It is noticeable that one
of the prerogative powers assumed by Lord
Roskill in the GCHQ case to be non-
justiciable, the prerogative of mercy, has since
been judicially reviewed. In R. v. Secretary of
State for the Home Department. ex p Bentley,
the applicant applied for review of the Home
Secretary’s decision not to pardon her brother
who had been sentenced to death and hanged
39 years earlier. The applicant contended that
the Home Secretary had erred in law in his
approach to the issue in that he considered
that the grant of free pardon required the
finding that her brother was morally and
technically innocent, where the right question
to be asked was whether in all the
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circumstances the punishment imposed
should have been suffered. It was held that
the decision ought to be based upon accepted
public law principles and not be immune from
legal challenge, despite the element of policy
in the decision. The Home Secretary’s failure
to consider the grant of a posthumous pardon
when the previous Home Secretary’s decision
had been wrong was held to be a clear error of
law. The court broke new ground in this case,
guided only by a recent decision of the New
Zealand Court of Appeal".
In "THE CONSTITUTION OF UNITED STATES OF AMERICA"
(Analysis and Interpretation) "Pardons and Reprieves" have
been stated as follows:
"The Legal Nature of a Pardon
In the first case to be decided concerning
the pardoning power, Chief Justice Marshall,
speaking for the Court, said: "As this power
had been exercised from time immemorial by
the executive of that nation whose language is
our language, and to whose judicial
institution ours bear a close resemblance; we
adopt their principles respecting the operation
and effect of a pardon, and look into their
books for the rules prescribing the manner in
which it is to be used by the person who
would avail himself of it. A pardon is an act of
grace, proceeding from the power entrusted
with the execution of the laws, which exempts
the individual, on whom it is bestowed, from
the punishment the law inflicts for a crime he
has committed. It is the private, though
official act of the executive magistrate
delivered to the individual for whose benefit it
is intended, and not communicated officially
to the Court.... A pardon is a deed, to the
validity of which delivery is essential, and
delivery is not complete without acceptance.
It may then be rejected by the person to
whom it is tendered; and if it be rejected, we
have discovered no power in a court to force it
on him." Marshall continued to hold that to
be noticed judicially this deed must be
pleaded, like any private instrument.
In the case of Burdick v. United States,
Marshall’s doctrine was put to a test that
seems to have overtaxed it, perhaps fatally.
Burdick, having declined to testify before a
federal grand jury on the ground that his
testimony would tend to incriminate him was
proffered by President Wilson "a full and
unconditional pardon for all offenses against
the United States," which he might have
committed or participated in connection with
the matter he had been questioned about.
Burdick, nevertheless, refused to accept the
pardon and persisted in his contumacy with
the unanimous support of the Supreme
Court. "The grace of a pardon," remarked
Justice McKenna sententiously, "may be only
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a pretense ... involving consequences of even
greater disgrace than those from which it
purports to relieve. Circumstances may be
made to bring innocence under the penalties
of the law. If so brought, escape by confession
of guilt implied in the acceptance of a pardon
may be rejected\005." Nor did the Court give any
attention to the fact that the President had
accompanied his proffer to Burdick with a
proclamation, although a similar procedure
had been held to bring President Johnson’s
amnesties to the Court’s notice. In 1927,
however, in sustaining the right of the
President to commute a sentence of death to
one of life imprisonment, against the will of
the prisoner, the Court abandoned this view.
"A pardon in our days," it said, "is not a
private act of grace from an individual
happening to possess power. It is a part of the
constitutional scheme. When granted it is the
determination of the ultimate authority that
the public welfare will be better served by
inflicting less than what the judgment fixed."
Whether these words sound the death knell of
the acceptance doctrine is perhaps doubtful.
They seem clearly to indicate that by
substituting a commutation order for a deed
of pardon, a President can always have his
way in such matters, provided that
substituted penalty is authorised by law and
does not in common understanding exceed
the original penalty.
Coming to the factual position it is noticed that the
various materials were placed before the Governor when the
request for grant of pardon/remission was processed at
various levels. The views of the District level officials were
obtained. Since they formed the basis of impugned order, it is
relevant to take note of some interesting features. The three
District level officials were Superintendent of Police, the
District Collector, Kunoor and the District Probation Officer.
Apart from that, the views of the Superintendent of jail,
Central Prison, Cherlapally were obtained. The Collector’s
report refers to the report given by the Superintendent of
Police and reproduces the same in the report contained in
letter dated 9.12.2004. He also refers the letter dated
8.12.2004 of the Revenue Divisional Officer who according to
him had indicated no objection to release of respondent No.2
on premature basis as his conduct and character was good
and he lead ordinary life during the period of his escort parole
from 19.5.2004 to 7.8.2004 and the free parole from
20.10.2004 to 6.11.2004. Only on that basis the District
Collector recommended premature release.
According to learned counsel for the State this was
sufficient as the Collector had to act on some material and he
acted on the reports of the Superintendent of Police and the
Revenue Divisional officer. The plea is clearly unacceptable.
The Collector does not appear to have made any independent
enquiry on his own. The report of District Probation officer is
very interesting. In his report he has stated that if he
(Respondent No.2) is prematurely released his life would be
safe because his wife is a sitting MLA and she is having a
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police security. Further he was having a strong hold in the
village and there is no opposition in Bramhanakotkur village.
Following portion of his report shows as to how extraneous
materials which had no relevance formed the foundation of his
report.
"The convict Gouru Venkata Reddy S/o
Janardhan Reddy, Central Prison Cherlapalli
belongs to Upper Caste Reddy’s family of
Brahmanakotkur (Village) Nandikotkur
Mandal and Taluk. The father of the convict
was Janardhan Reddy and mother was Gouru
Lakshmi Devi and during enquiry it is
revealed that both were dead. The grand
mother of convict Smt. Ratnamma is old, aged
and there is no male person in the house to
look after her. She desires that the convict
should come and provide medical treatment
to her.
In the past the convict contested in the
elections and was defeated with small margin.
During enquiry it is revealed that the convict
is Congress Worker and due to political
conspiracy he was defeated. In the elections
conducted later on the wife of convict Smt.
Saritha Reddy contested and was elected.
During enquiry it is revealed that the matters
mentioned in the application of the wife of the
convict are true. The convict has two sisters.
The deceased K. Rama Subbaiah and Ambi
Reddy belong to Nandikotkur village. In this
murder case the convict is not involved but
due to political reasons his name was
implicated in the case by producing false
witnesses and sent to the Jail. But later they
realized their mistake and the family
members of the deceased are maintaining
cordial relations. During enquiry it is revealed
that there is no danger to the life of the
convict from the villagers and also there is no
danger to the villagers from the convict if the
convict is released as stated by the President
of the village Shri Shaik Ziauddin, Village
Secretary Sri Sanjanna, village elders Shri
Nagaswamy Reddy, Sri K. Venkata Rami
Reddy, Shri Khajamoinuddin and Sri Pathan
Moutali etc.
As seen from the past history of the
convict he is not a naxalite, dacoit, and
habitual offender. He was peacefully carrying
out agricultural activities and a good
Congress Worker. He used to provide
employment to a number of persons through
agriculture. It is also revealed that the
villagers are having good opinion on the
convict. "
(underlined for emphasis)
Apart from apparently wrong statement made that
respondent No.2 was maintaining cordial relationship with the
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family members of the deceased, he has highlighted that he
was a "good Congress Worker". Further there is an inference
that he was not involved in the murder was falsely implicated
and false witnesses were produced. This inference on the fact
of this Court’s judgment is utterly fallacious. The question of
his being a "good Congress Worker" has no relevance the
objects sought to be achieved i.e. consideration of the question
whether pardon/remission was to be granted. Equally
surprising is the statement to the effect that during enquiry it
was revealed that the convict is Congress worker and by
political conspiracy he was defeated in the elections conducted
earlier.
The report of the Superintendent of Police is equally
interesting. He has stated that there will be no reaction in
Brahmana Kotkur village and Nandikotkur town if the
prisoner releases on prematurely. The report is dated
6.12.2004. Before the elections, the same officer had reported
that on account of respondent No.2’s release on parole, there
was likelihood of breach of peace and law and order if he visits
Nandikotkur Assembly Constituency. The only reason why a
pariah becomes a messiah appears to be the change in the
ruling pattern. With such pliable bureaucracy, there is need
for deeper scrutiny when power of pardon/remission is
exercised.
It appears that in the petition filed by respondent No.3
there is no mention about pendency of a Criminal case No.
411 of 2000. Learned counsel for the respondent No.1-State
submitted that though this fact was not mentioned by the
respondent No.3 in the petition yet the State Government
considered the effect of the pendency of that petition. This
certainly is a serious matter because a person who seeks
exercise of highly discretionary power of a high constitutional
authority, has to show bona fides and must place materials
with clean hands.
When the principles of law as noted above are considered
in the factual background it is clear that the irrelevant and
extraneous materials entered into the decision making
process, thereby vitiating it.
The order granting remission which is impugned in the
petition is clearly unsustainable and is set aside. However, it
is open to the respondent No.1 to treat the petition as a
pending one for the purpose of re-consideration. It shall be
open to the Governor to take note of materials placed before
him by the functionaries of the State, and also to make such
enquiries as considered necessary and relevant for the
purpose of ascertaining the relevant factors otherwise. The
writ petitions are allowed to the extent indicated above. No
costs.