Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
LIFE CONVICT LAXMAN NASKAR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF WEST BENGAL & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 01/09/2000
BENCH:
S. Rajendra Babu, J. & Shivaraj V. Patil, J.
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
RAJENDRA BABU, J.:
L...I...T.......T.......T.......T.......T.......T.......T..J
This writ petition filed under Article 32 of the
Constitution seeks for the release of the petitioner who is
undergoing imprisonment for life after having been convicted
under Section 302 I.P.C. read with Section 34 I.P.C.. The
claim of the petitioner is that he has undergone the
following period of actual sentence and earned remissions :-
YEAR
MONTHS
DAYS
(a) From 25.6.1982 To
1.5.2000 including
under trial period
confinement
17
10
6
(b) Remissions earned
or Govt. Remissions
granted upto
31.12.1999
5
8
29
(c) Total sentence
including remissions
23
7
5
The petitioner also claims that under Section 61(1) of
the West Bengal Correctional Services Act XXXII of 1992,
which on Presidential assent being given came to force with
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effect from April 14, 2000, he is entitled to be released
inasmuch as he had served the sentence and earned remissions
as detailed above and was entitled to be released as on
September 27, 1996. The details are set forth hereunder :-
YEAR
MONTHS
DAYS
(i) Length of life
imprisonment under
the definition of
punishment vide
explanation is :
20
0
0
(ii) Deduct the period
of remission earned or
granted under section
58 or section 59
5
8
29
14
3
1
(iii) Deduct the period
of set off under section
428, CrPC 1973
0
2
8
(iv) Total amount of
actual sentence the
petitioner herein was
liable to undergo
14
0
24
DAYS
MONTHS
YEAR
v) Sentence of the
petitioner started from
the date of his sentence
on 3.9.1982
3
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9
1982
(vi) Add the amount
actual sentence to be
undergone from item
(iii) above
24
0
14
(vii) Date of Release on
which the
Superintendent of jail
was liable to release the
petitioner rule 771 now
under section 61(1)
read with Rule 571 in
chapter XIII West
Bengal Jail Code.
27
that is,
27th
September,
1996
9
1996
After examining the legal position as to the nature of
the powers arising under Section 432 Cr.P.C. read with@@
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Article 161 of the Constitution and the relevant rules@@
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relating to remission of sentences, it is observed in the
State of Madhya Pradesh v. Ratan Singh, 1976 (3) SCC 470,
as under :-
(1) That a sentence of imprisonment for life does not
automatically expire at the end of 20 years including the
remissions, because the Administrative Rules framed under
the various Jail Manuals or under the Prison Act cannot
supersede the statutory provisions of the Indian Penal Code.
A sentence of imprisonment for life means a sentence for the
entire life of the prisoner unless the appropriate
Government chooses to exercise its discretion to remit
either the whole or a part of the sentence under Section 401
of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898;
(2) That the appropriate Government has the undoubted
discretion to remit or refuse to remit the sentence and
where it refuses to remit the sentence no writ can be issued
directing the State Government to release the prisoner.
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In Naib Singh v. State of Punjab, 1983 (2) SCC 454, it
was noticed that a distinction between imprisonment for@@
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life and imprisonment for a term has been maintained in@@
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the Indian Penal Code in several of its provisions and
moreover, whenever an offender is punishable with
imprisonment for life he is not punishable with
imprisonment which may be of either description within the
meaning of Section 60 I.P.C. and therefore, we cannot come
to the conclusion that the court, by itself, could release
the convict automatically before the full life term is
served. This aspect was highlighted in Gopal Vinayak Godse
v. State of Maharashtra & Ors., 1961 (3) SCR 440, wherein
it was held that sentence for imprisonment for life
ordinarily means imprisonment for the whole of the remaining
period of the convicted persons natural life; that a
convict undergoing such sentence may earn remissions of his
part of sentence under the Prison Rules but such remissions
in the absence of an order of an appropriate Government
remitting the entire balance of his sentence under this
Section does not entitle the convict to be released
automatically before the full life term is served. It was
observed that though under the relevant rules a sentence for
imprisonment for life is equated with the definite period of
20 years, there is no indefeasible right of such prisoner to
be unconditionally released on the expiry of such particular
term, including remissions and that is only for the purpose
of working out the remissions that the said sentence is
equated with definite period and not for any other purpose.
In view of this legal position explained by this Court it
may not help the petitioner even on the construction placed
by the learned counsel for the petitioner on Section 61(1)
of the West Bengal Correctional Services Act XXXII of 1992
with reference to explanation thereto that for the purpose
of calculation of the total period of imprisonment under
this Section the period of imprisonment for life shall be
taken to be equivalent to the period of imprisonment for 20
years. Therefore, solely on the basis of completion of a
term in jail serving imprisonment and remissions earned
under the relevant rules or law will not entitle an
automatic release, but the appropriate Government must pass
a separate order remitting the un-expired portion of the
sentence.
If what we have stated above is the correct position in law
then what arises for consideration in this case is whether
there has been due consideration of the case of the
petitioner by the Government. On an earlier occasion when
the matter had come up before this Court an order dated
February 15, 2000 had been made directing the Government to
re-consider the cases for premature release of all life
convicts who had approached the Court earlier. Thereafter,
the Government constituted a Review Committee consisting of
the following members to examine the matter and make a
report thereof to the Court :-
1) Home Secretary Chairman
2) Judicial Secretary Convenor
3) I.G. of Prisons, West Bengal Member
4) Secretary Home (Jails) Department Member
5) D.G. & I.G. of Police, West Bengal Member
6) Commissioner of Police, Calcutta Member
7) Chief Probation Officer Member
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This Court also issued certain guidelines as to the
basis on which a convict can be released prematurely and@@
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they are as under :-@@
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1. Whether the offence is an individual act of crime
without affecting the society at large.
2. Whether there is any fruitful purpose of confining
of this convict anymore.
3. Whether there is any chance of future reoccurrence
of committing crime.
4. Whether the convict has lost his potentiality in
committing crime.
5. Socio Economic condition of the convicts family.
In the present case, the report of the jail authorities
is in favour of the petitioner. However, the Review@@
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Committee constituted by the Government recommended to@@
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reject the claim of premature release of the petitioner for
the following reasons :-
1. That the police report has revealed that the two
witnesses who had deposed before the trial court and the
people of the locality are all apprehensive of acute breach
of peace in the locality in case of premature release of the
petitioner;
2. That the petitioner is a person of about 43 years
and hence he has the potential of committing crime; and
3. That the incident in relation to which the crime had
occurred was the sequel of the political feud affecting the
society at large. If we look at the reasons given by the
Government, we are afraid that the same are palpably
irrelevant or devoid of substance. Firstly, the views of
the witnesses who had been examined in the case or the
persons in the locality cannot determine whether the
petitioner would be a danger if prematurely released because
the persons in the locality and the witnesses may still live
in the past and their memories are being relied upon without
reference to the present and the report of the jail
authorities to the effect that the petitioner has reformed
himself to a large extent. Secondly, by reason of ones age
one cannot say whether the convict has still potentiality of
committing the crime or not, but it depends on his attitude
to matters, which is not being taken note of by the
Government. Lastly, the suggestion that the incident is not
an individual act of crime but a sequel of the political
feud affecting society at large, whether his political views
have been changed or still carries the same so as to commit
crime has not been examined by the Government. could On the@@
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basis of the grounds stated above the Government not have@@
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rejected the claim made by the petitioner. In the
circumstances, we quash the order made by the Government and
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remit the matter to it again to examine the case of the
petitioner in the light of what has been stated by this
Court earlier and our comments made in this order as to the
grounds upon which the Government refused to act on the
report of the jail authorities and also to take note of the
change in the law by enacting the West Bengal Correctional
Services Act XXXII of 1992 and to decide the matter afresh
within a period of three months from today. The writ
petition is allowed accordingly. After issuing rule the
same is made absolute.