Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MAKTOOL SINGH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF PUNJAB
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 17/03/2000
BENCH:
K.T.Thomas, M.B.shah
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T Thomas J. Leave granted. Can thesentence, passed on a convicte
d person under the Narcotic
Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act, 1985 (for short the
Act) be suspended during the pendency of appeal presented
by him? Answers given to the said question by different
High Courts are in different tones. The question has now
winched to the fore in this Court as the appellant did not
succeed in getting the sentence (passed on him) suspended by
the High Court though he moved for it on presentation of an
appeal in challenge of the conviction and sentence.
Section 32A of the Act, which was inserted by Act No.2
of 1989 reads thus:
32A. No suspension, remission or commutation in any
sentence awarded under this Act Notwithstanding anything
contained in the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 or any
other law for the time being in force but subject to the
provisions of section 33, no sentence awarded under this Act
(other than section 27) shall be suspended or remitted or
commuted.
A plain reading of the above Section is that it
prohibits suspension of a sentence awarded under the Act
except in the case of an offence under Section 27. To make
the aforesaid meaning clearer the legislature has added a
non obstante limb to the Section to the effect that such
prohibition is operative in spite of any other provision
contained in the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (for short
the Code) or under any other law. But the impact of the
aforesaid ban is sought to be diluted with the help of
Section 36B of the Act which reads thus:
36B. Appeal and revision The High Court may
exercise, so far as may be applicable, all the powers
conferred by Chapters XXIX and XXX of the Code of Criminal
Procedure, 1973, on a High Court, as if a Special Court
within the local limits of the jurisdiction of the High
Court were a Court of Session trying cases within the local
limits of the jurisdiction of the High Court.
Chapter XXIX of the Code contains a fasciculus of
provisions for dealing with Appeals among which is
included Section 389 of the Code which confers power for
suspension of sentence pending appeal. Such powers can be
exercised by the appellate court as well as by the High
Court. In certain cases power of suspension of sentence can
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be exercised by the convicting court as provided in
sub-section (3).
The argument advanced before us is that when Section
36B of the Act preserved the powers of the High Court under
Chapter XXIX of the Code while dealing with an appeal
challenging conviction under the Act, it must be deemed to
have preserved all the powers mentioned in Section 389 of
the Code including the power to suspend the sentence. But
we cannot give accord to that argument on the following
grounds. When Section 36B of the Act is juxtaposed with
Section 32A the latter must dominate over the former mainly
for two reasons. First is that Section 32A overrides all
the provisions of the Code, by specific terms, through the
non obstante limb incorporated therein. Second is that
Section 36B has clearly indicated that its applicability is
subject to the extent of adaptability because of the words
employed therein so far as may be applicable. This means,
the High Court can exercise powers under Chapter XXIX of the
Code only to the extent such powers are applicable. In
other words, if there is an interdict against applicability
of any provision, the High Court cannot use such provision,
albeit its inclusion in Chapter XXIX of the Code. That is
the effect of employment of the words so far as may be
applicable when a statute incorporates provision of another
statute.
Otherwise Section 32A of the Act must have been
intended for covering some other field altogether. Learned
counsel contended that the Section is intended to cover the
provisions subsumed in placitum E in Chapter XXXII of the
Code. Sections 432 to 435 are bundled therein. The
sub-title given to placitum E is this: Suspension,
Remission and Commutation of Sentences. Section 432 deals
with the power of the appropriate Government to suspend
execution of any sentence or to remit the whole or any part
of the punishment to which any person has been sentenced.
Section 433 deals with the powers of the Government to
commute sentence. The contention is that Parliament has
sought to curb the aforesaid powers of the Government
through enactment of Section 32A of the Act, and not the
power of the High Court to suspend sentence.
If the intention of Parliament in enacting Section 32A
of the Act is only to curb Governments powers under
Sections 432 and 433 of the Code the Parliament would,
instead of using the present all covering words in the non
obstante clause (notwithstanding anything contained in the
Code or in any other law) have employed the words
notwithstanding anything contained in Chapter XXXII of the
Code. Precision and brevity are generally the hallmarks of
legislative draftsmanship. Hence lesser words for achieving
the purpose would have been employed by the legislature
while framing a provision in the statute.
That apart, could parliament have laboured so much if
its only object was to bridle the powers of the Government
under Section 432 and 433 of the Code because even apart
from those provisions a Government could achieve it by
exercising the constitutional powers. Article 72 of the
Constitution of India confers power on the President of
India to suspend, remit or commute sentence in all cases
where punishment or sentence is for an offence against any
law relating to a matter to which executive power of the
Union extends. Art.161 contains similar power which
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Government of a State can exercise in relation to a person
convicted of any offence against law relating to a matter
which the executive power of the State extends. A
Constitution Bench of this Court has held in Maru Ram vs.
Union of India (AIR 1980 SC 2147) that power under Arts.72
and 161 of the Constitution cannot be exercised by the
President or Governor on their own but only on the advice of
the appropriate Government. The said ratio has been
followed by another Constitution Bench in Kehar Singh vs.
Union of India (AIR 1989 SC 653). Thus, the position
relating to Arts.72 and 161 of the Constitution, as
interpreted by this Court, is that the appropriate executive
Government can advice the Head of the State to exercise
powers thereunder and such advice is binding on him.
If the object of S.32A of the NDPS Act is to take away
the power of the Government to suspend, remit or commute the
sentence, the legislative exercise in enacting the said
provision is practically of futility because even without
Section 432 of the Code, the appropriate Government can
suspend, remit or commute sentences in exercise of the
constitutional functions.
For the aforesaid reasons we are not impressed by the
contention that the sole object of incorporating a provision
like Section 32A in NDPS Act was to impose curb on the
executive power under Sections 432 and 433 of the Code to
suspend, remit or commute the sentence passed on a
particular accused.
In this context the raison detre for introducing
Section 32A in the Act can be looked at. In the Statement
of Objects and Reasons for introducing Bill No.125/1988 in
the Lok Sabha (which later became Act 2 of 1989) the
following passage has been mentioned as one of the
statements: Even though the major offences are
non-bailable by virtue of the level of punishment, on
technical grounds, drug offenders were being released on
bail. In the light of certain difficulties faced in the
enforcement of NDPS Act, 1985 the need to amend the law to
further strengthen it, has been felt.
One of the objects mentioned therein is this: To
provide that no sentence awarded under the Act shall be
suspended, remitted or commuted.
It must be pointed out that in the Statement of
Objects and Reasons no concern was shown against the
executive powers of remission or commutation or suspension
of sentence, but the main concern focussed was on the need
to further strengthen the bail provisions. That apart, we
are not aware of any criticism from any quarter that
Government have been remitting or suspending or commuting
sentences awarded to persons convicted of offences under the
Act. It is preposterous to think that a situation was
created by which Parliament was forced to step in to curb
the executive powers of the Government to suspend sentences
passed on the convicts under the Act.
At this juncture a reference to Section 37 of the Act
is apposite. That provision makes the offences under the
Act cognizable and non-bailable. It reads thus:
37. Offences to be cognizable and non- bailable.-
(1) Notwithstanding anything contained in the Code of
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Criminal Procedure, 1973- (a) every offence punishable under
this Act shall be cognizable; (b) no person accused of an
offence punishable for a term of imprisonment of five years
or more under this Act shall be released on bail or on his
own bond unless-
(i) the Public Prosecutor has been given an
opportunity to oppose the application for such release, and
(ii) where the Public Prosecutor opposes the application,
the court is satisfied that there are reasonable grounds for
believing that he is not guilty of such offence and that he
is not likely to commit any offence while on bail.
(2) The limitations on granting of bail specified in
clause (b) of sub-section (1) are in addition to the
limitations under the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 or
any other law for the time being in force, on granting
bail.
The only offences exempted from the purview of the
aforesaid rigors on the bail provisions are those under
Sections 26 and 27 of the Act. The former is punishable up
to a maximum imprisonment for three years and latter up to a
maximum imprisonment for one year. For all other offences
the courts power to release an accused on bail during the
period before conviction has been thus drastically curtailed
by providing that if the Public Prosecutor opposes the bail
application no accused shall be released on bail, unless the
court is satisfied that there are reasonable grounds for
believing that he is not guilty of such offence.
If the position was thus even before a trial court
completes adjudication, the position regarding bail cannot
be more liberal and lighter after the trial court finds him
guilty of the offence on completion of the adjudication.
The interpretation sought to be placed by the learned
counsel would lead to the consequence that power of court to
release an accused on bail during pre- conviction is
rigorous while it will be liberal during post-conviction
period. We do not think that Parliament would have intended
such a consequence to take place. Section 32A was intended
to plug the lacuna which existed during the pre-amendment
stage.
It is pertinent to notice that Section 32A itself
exempted cases falling under Section 27 of the Act by
putting the words other than Section 27 within a
parenthesis. This is because Section 27 deals with offences
of far lesser degree when compared with the other offences
in the Act. Learned counsel contended that if that was the
intention of Parliament Section 26 also would have been
included in the parenthesis so as to exempt that offence
from the purview of Section 32A. We are not disposed to
question the wisdom of Parliament as to why Section 26 was
also not brought within the exemption. Perhaps it was not
so done because Section 26 relates to offences which are
more serious than the offences mentioned in Section 27 of
the Act.
A Full Bench of the Kerala High Court in Berlin Joseph
@ Ravi vs. State (1992 1 Crimes 1221 = 1992 KLT 514) has
adopted the view that Section 32A of the Act has curtailed
the powers of the court to suspend the sentence passed on a
convicted person of offences under the Act, except the
offence under Section 27. A Division Bench of Rajasthan
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High Court in Anwar vs. State (1994 2 Crimes 687) and a
Full Bench of Madhya Pradesh High Court in Rajendra Singh
vs. State of M.P. (1995 Crl. Law Journal 3248) have also
adopted the same view.
But a Division Bench of the Delhi High Court in
Amarjit Singh vs. State (1993 2 Recent Crl. Reports 466)
has taken a different view on Section 32A. Though the Full
Bench decision in Berlin Joseph vs. State (supra) was
brought to the notice of the Division Bench it was skipped
by a curt observation in the following lines: Mr. Handa
strongly relied on a later Full Bench decision of the Kerala
High Court in Berlin Joseph @ Ravi v. State (1992 1 Crimes
1221) where the Full Bench has taken the view that High
Court has no power to suspend the sentence of a convicted
person under the Act during the pendency of his appeal or
revision. With respect we are unable to agree to this view.
Section 32A of the Act is neither a proviso to section 36B
of the Act nor it controls it.
The Delhi High Court has not adverted to any of the
reasoning contained in Berlin Josephs decision. But a Full
Bench of the Gujarat High Court in Jyotiben Ramlal Purohit
vs. State of Gujarat (1997 3 Recent Crl. Reports 607)
considered the question, rather at length, and differed from
the ratio in Berlin Joseph (supra). Three premises were put
forward by the Gujarat High Court in the said decision.
First is that Section 36B has clearly conferred all powers
provided in Chapter XXIX of the Code. Second is, the word
award used in Section 32A of the Code denotes only the
sentence passed by the final court and not the trial court.
Third is, that under Section 389(3) of the Code a trial
court is empowered to suspend the sentence for the offence
under Section 26 of the Act and if that be so the
legislature can hardly have thought about bringing such an
anomalous consequence, namely that the trial court can grant
bail but the appellate court cannot. We must observe that
the aforesaid three premise are faulty. We have already
dealt with the contention that Section 36B would take care
of powers of the appellate court to suspend the sentence and
we found that the provision cannot override the clear ban
contained in Section 32A of the Act. The second premise
that the word award should be construed not as a sentence
passed by the trial court cannot be upheld at all. How can
it be said that when trial court awards a sentence that
cannot be treated in law as a sentence awarded. Then what
is the legal import of such a sentence? To say that a
sentence passed by a trial court would be no awarding of
sentence merely because the conviction has been challenged,
appears to us to be too tenuous for countenance. The third
premise adopted by the Gujarat High Court is based on a
fallacious assumption that in spite of Section 32A the trial
court has power to suspend the sentence passed on a
conviction under Section 26 of the Act. Learned judges
wrongly assumed that under Section 389(3) of the Code a
trial court has such a power. The effect of any order
passed under Section 389(3) of the Code is to suspend the
sentence, as can be discerned from the words in the specific
and the sentence of imprisonment shall be deemed to be
suspended. When power of suspending the sentence is taken
away by the legislative interdict, it would apply to the
court which convicts the accused as well. A legal premise
cannot be made up on a wrong assumption.
The upshot of the above discussion is that Section 32A
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of the Act has taken away the powers of the court to suspend
a sentence passed on persons convicted of offences under the
Act (except Section 27) either during pendency of any appeal
or otherwise. Similarly, the power of the Government under
Section 432, 433 and 434 of the Criminal Procedure Code have
also been taken away. Section 32A would have an overriding
effect with regard to the powers of suspension, commutation
and remission provided under the Criminal Procedure Code.
Before parting with the matter we must deal with a
possible fall-out of adopting such a view. Learned counsel
for the appellant has voiced a concern that if High Courts
have no power to suspend sentence under any contingency its
consequence is that long duration of pendency of appeals
would result in serious miscarriage of justice in many
cases. We are aware of such hard consequences which might
erupt. The solution to such problems can be worked out by
Parliament. Till then the High Courts should direct the
Registry to board appeals under the Act on a priority basis
and dispose them of as early as possible. As a temporary
measure to lessen the problem we direct the Registry of each
High Court to include every appeal (against conviction of
offences under the Act) in the hearing list as soon as such
appeal becomes ripe for hearing. We express the hope that
the Bench of the High Court concerned would give preference
to such appeal for early hearing. The appeal is disposed of
accordingly.