Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
LINGALA VIJAYAKUMAR & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
PUBLIC PROSECUTOR, ANDHRA PRADESH
DATE OF JUDGMENT02/08/1978
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
DESAI, D.A.
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
CITATION:
1978 AIR 1485 1979 SCR (1) 2
1978 SCC (4) 196
ACT:
Sentence-Enhancement of the sentence by the High Court
under Section 377 of the Criminal Procedure Code, 1973
explained.
Sentence-Correctional sentence, plea for-Prison justice
vis-a-vis- social justice and right of the prisoners to
humane treatment under Art. 19 of the Constitution.
HEADNOTE:
The appellants were duly prosecuted. convicted and
awarded sentences of 2 1/2 years rigorous imprisonment each
for the offence of having robbed the State Bank by
committing dacoity. Appeals by the accused and the State
ended in the enhancement of the sentence to seven years R.I.
each. Hence the appeal by special leave.
Dismissing the appeal, but modifying the sentence as
awarded by the Sessions the Court
^
HELD: The High Court has superseded the trial Court’s
discretionary impost for which it has power, provided error
in principle or perverse exercise or like faux pas is
pointed out and those reasons are stated. Appellate power to
prune or protract is not unbridled when discretion once
exercised is to be upset. And the higher Court can be
draconic, if grounds exist, but it cannot be laconic. The
specific reasons assigned by the Sessions Court must be
countered by clear ratiocination and then the Supreme Court
ordinarily keeps out. [6 A-B, E]
In the instant case, the four words which did justice
to the trial court were "the ends of justice" without
specifying what they were and there was no speaking order
in the High Court’s substantial enhancement. None of the
reasons given by the Sessions Court have been expressly
dissented from by the High Court or can be called
impertinent. [6E, 7C]
Observations:
(i) "Cash awards for bravery" to witnesses when a
criminal case is pending may be euphemistic officialese but
may be construed by the accused as purchase price for
testimonial fidelity. The overzealous antics and
objectionable tactics are far from fair for a political
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Government which pays homage to judicial justice and betrays
a mood of executive interference with the course of justice
where political vendetta shows up. No one is above contempt
power in our constitutional order. [5A-B]
(ii) Prison justice is part of social justice. The writ
of the rule of law, if it runs within the jail system shall
not permit inhumanity. On appropriate motion made to this
Court showing violation of the residual rights of a prisoner
by unnecessary cruelty and unreasonable impositions and
denial and deprivations within the prison-setting, the
judicial process will call to order the prison authorities
and make them respect the fundamental rights of the
appellants Prisoners are not non-persons. [8B-C, 10-B]
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(iii) The Court has responsibility to see that
punishment serves social defence which is the validation of
deprivation of citizen’s liberty. Correctional treatment
with a rehabilitative orientation, is an imperative of
modern penology which has abandoned jus talionis. The
therapeutic basis of incarceratory lifestyle is not unknown
to Gandhian India because the Father of the Nation regarded
a criminal as a morally aberrant patient. A hospital setting
and a humanitarian ethos must pervade our prisons if the
retributive theory, which is but vengeance in disguise, is
to disappear and deterrence as a punitive objective gain
success not through the hardening practice of inhumanity
inflicted on prisoners but by reformation and healing
whereby the creative potential of the prisoner is unfolded.
These values have their roots in Art. 19 of the Constitution
which sanctions deprivation of freedoms provided they render
a reasonable service to social defence, public order and
security of the State. [7D-G]
[The Court-directed that the appellants being
"children" within the meaning of the "Saurashtra Children
Act", though not under the Andhra Children Act, be separated
from adult prisoners. More particularly the appellants
should be allowed opportunities for improving themselves and
nourishing their minds with wholesome reading so that on
return to society they turn a new leaf.]
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeal No.
257 of 1978.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and order
dated 18-10-76 of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in Criminal
Appeal No. 221 /75 and Criminal Appeal No. 749 of 1975.
R. K. Garg and V. J. Francis for the Appellant.
P. P. Rao and G. N. Rao for the Respondent.
The order of the Court was delivered by
KRISHNA IYER, J.-Seven dangerously ideological
teenagers, politically impatient with the deepening
injustice of the economic order and ebulliently infantile in
their terrorist tactics, were sentenced to seven years in
prison for the offence of having robbed the State Bank of a
few thousand rupees with non-violent use of crude pistols,
and country bombs which, ill the language of the Penal Code,
amounts to dacoity-a grave property crime. They were duly
prosecuted, convicted and awarded 2 1/2- years rigorous
imprisonment. Appeals by the accused and the State ended in
the enhancement of the sentence to seven years R.I. each.
We have, on a perusal of the judgment, under appeal and
after hearing Sri Garg for the appellants, declined to
demolish the conviction although the scenario of events is
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judicially disquieting. Why ? Because in our adversary
system and ’umpire’ tradition of the judicial process the
weaker accused, sometimes anathematized as naxalite or by
other unpopular appellation, is theoretically equal before
the law but in real-life terms, thanks to practical
handicaps, the scales of
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justice (not the judges) tend to incline against him. Law is
what law does, not what law speaks. The Judge, tradition-
bound plays an umpire’s passive role in an adversary system.
He holds on the basis of proof proffered by the prosecution,
tested by the conventional process of cross-examination and
the standard yardsticks of credibility. He has no activist
alternative of further probe, for he has no independent
assistance in that behalf. The technical power to summon
court witness or put questions hardly helps in practice. And
when the defence is financially, socially, politically or
otherwise too weak to explore the investigatory veracity or
explode the testimonial value of the prosecution and its
witnesses or to undertake its own garnering of effective
materials to establish innocence, the equal scales of
justice operate queerly. Even so, we cannot travel beyond
the record, and concurrent findings of fact acquire a
judicial sanctity which stands in the way of our
reassessment of evidence at the tertiary stage. For this
reason we confine ourselves to the conscientious issue of
correctional sentence-that Cinderalla of Indian Criminology
despite Section 235(2), Cr. P. Code.
Never-the-less, we must express our astonishment at the
hasty impropriety of making cash awards to prosecution
witnesses when the case was sub-judice, at a public ceremony
where the Chief Minister himself presided. The factual
foundation is furnished by the following paragraph in the
judgment of the trial court:
"Before parting with the case I wish to observe
that the government by giving awards to some of
the witnesses in the case at a public meeting held
at Naidugudem presided over by the Chief Minister
while the matter was still sub-judice for their
having courageously chased the accused and caught
them soon after the offence created an
embarrassing situation for the court making it
difficult to arrive at the truth without a
prejudiced mind. But all the same I scrupulously
kept this aspect of the case from my mind and
arrived at the decision independently on merits.
The government ought not to have prejudged the
case and awarded any cash prizes to any of the
witnesses. What an awkward figure the government
would cut if due to some compelling legal
requirements the court was obliged to come to a
conclusion that the witnesses to whom it had given
awards in advance were all got up witnesses
unworthy of credit ? I think it will not be too
much if I hope that things of this type will not
be repeated by the government in future in its own
interests and in the interests of administration
of justice."
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Emphatically we agree. ’Cash awards for bravery’ to
witnesses when a criminal case is pending may be euphemistic
officialese but may be construed by the accused as purchase
price for testimonial fidelity.
The overzealous antics and objectionable tactics are
far from fair for a political government which pays homage
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to Judicial justice and betrays a mood of executive
interference with the course of justice where political
vendetta shows up. We enter this caveat to arrest repetition
and to alert about consequences. No one is above contempt
power in our constitutional order.
Now we reach the crucial question of the appropriate
punishment The conspectus of facts relevant to this branch
may be recapitulated. (i) all the seven sentences are around
seventeen; (ii) all of them are self-less ideologues with
revolutionary ardour impressed militantly with the Preamble
declaration of the Constitution ’to secure economic
justice’; (iii) none of them is a dacoit in the highway
robbery sense but everyone is in the criminal connotation-
more dangerous for the proprietariat because they violently
and openly challenge the basis of 1 those capitalist values
which find expression in the 118-year-old Penal Code. It is
a matter for Parliamentary action whether the Code should
shift its penal emphasis to the social justice concerns of
Part III and IV more than Lord Macaulay meant.)
The primary considerations which persuaded the trial
Judge to 11: impose a lenient term of 30 months in jail have
been succinctly stated:
"(i) All the accused persons are very young,
accused No. 5 being only 17 years of age.
(ii) The behaviour of the accused persons in the
Court throughout the trial was exemplary.
(iii) The accused persons are really anxious to
relieve the suffering of the poor and are
absolutely sincere in this regard.
(iv) In their teens, they have voluntarily denied
themselves all comforts and are even risking
their lives for the sake of poor.
(v) No amount of repression would bring them into
the right path and that they should be won
over only by psychological methods and by
persuasion."
(We have borrowed from para 20 of the Special
Leave Petition).
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The High Court has superseded the trial court’s
discretionary impost for which it has power, provided error
in principle or perverse exercise or like faux pas is
pointed out and those reasons stated Appellate power to
prune or protract is not unbridled when discretion once
exercised is to be upset. And the higher court can be
draconic, if grounds exist, but it cannot be laconic.
Dealing with the sentence the learned judge observed:
"Coming to the sentence taking into consideration that
the accused are young people the learned Sessions Judge
thought that the ends of justice would be met if they
are sentenced to undergo R.I. for 2 1/2 years each.
Under Section 395 of the Indian Penal Code whoever
commits dacoity shall be punishable with imprisonment
for life or R.I. for a period which may extend to ten
years and-shall also be liable to fine. No doubt the
accused are young persons. None the less the offence
committed by them is a very grave one. I think the ends
of justice require enhancement of sentence and it would
simply be met if their sentences are enhanced to
undergo R.I. for a period of seven years each and to
pay a fine of Rs. 1,000 each and in default to undergo
R.I. for a further period of six months each.
The four words which do justice to the trial court are
"the ends of justice". What are the ends of justice here ?
The specific reasons assigned by the Sessions Court must be
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countered by clear ratiocination, and then the Supreme Court
ordinarily keeps out.
What do we mean by "the ends of justice’ ? Hans Kelsen
in a farewell lecture in Berkeley, way back in 1952, raised
the question and said:
"When Jesus of Nazareth was brought before Pilate
and admitted that he was a king he said: ’It was
for this that I was born, and for this that I came
to the world, to give testimony for truth.
Whereupon Pilate asked, ’What is truth?’ The Roman
procurator did not expect, and Jesus did not give,
an answer to this question; for to give testimony
for truth was not the essence of his mission as
Hessianic King. He was born to give testimony for
Justice, the justice to be realised in the
Kingdom’ of God, and for this justice he died on
the cross. Thus behind the question of Pilate
’What is truth’ ? arises, out of the blood of
Christ, another still more important question, the
eternal question of man kind. What is Justice ?
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No other question has been discussed so
passionately; no other question has caused so much
precious blood and so many bitter tears to be shed; no
other question has been the object of so much intensive
thinking by the most illustrious from Plato to Kant;
and yet, this question is today as unanswered as it
ever was. It seems that it is one of those questions to
which the resigned wisdom applies that man cannot find
a definitive answer, but can only try improve the
question".
It fairly follows that Christian justice was not Roman
justice, and social justice hardly squares with ’Haves’
justice. To enhance the sentence to seven years R.I. by
merely saying the ’ends of justice’ demand it is to continue
the question, as Prof. Kelsen put it, not to meet it. We
find no speaking order in the High Court’s substantial
enhancement and restore the sentence of the Sessions Court
imposed for stated reasons none of which have been expressly
dissented from by the High Court or can be called
impertinent.
Having desisted from interfering with the conviction
and having reverted to the sentence of the trial court we
feel impelled to make a few observations on prison justice
since under the court’s mandate these seven teenagers are
being sent into that world within the world which is
substantially sight-proof and sound-proof. The court has
responsibility to see that punishment serves social defence
which is the validation of deprivation of citizen’s liberty.
Correctional treatment, with a rehabilitative orientation,
is an imperative of modern r penology which has abandoned
jus talionis. The therapeutic basis of incarceratory life-
style is not unknown to Gandhian India because the Father of
the Nation regarded a criminal as a morally aberrant
patient. A hospital setting and a humanitarian ethos must
pervade our prisons if the retributive theory, which is but
vengeance in disguise, is to disappear and deterrence as a
punitive objective gain success not through the hardening
practice of inhumanity inflicted on prisoners but by
reformation and healing whereby the creative potential of
the prisoner is unfolded. These values have their roots in
Article 19 of the Constitution which sanctions deprivation
of freedoms provided they render a reasonable service to
social defence. public order and security of the State. By
cruel treatment within the cell you injure his psyche and
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injury never improves. Nay, you make him recidivist,
embittered and ready to battle with society on emerging from
the jail gates. By karuna informing prison practices you
instill a sense of dignity and worth in the prisoner- so
that he awakens to a new consciousness and re-makes himself.
It is obvious that it is unreasonable to be torture some, as
it recoils on society and it is reasonable to be
compassionate,
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educative and purposeful because it transforms the man and
makes him more social. This brief divagation leads to one
conclusion that within the jail these 7 youngmen shall not
be treated with anything of brutality-a caveat which has
become necessary when we remember that they are treated as
’naxalites’ and the witnesses who have given evidence
against them have been hurriedly rewarded officially by the
Chief Minister. The writ of the rule of law, if it runs
within the jail system, shall not permit inhumanity. On
appropriate motion made to this Court showing violation of
the residual rights of a prisoner by unnecessary cruelty and
unreasonable impositions and denials and deprivations within
the prison-setting, the judicial process will call to order
the prison authorities and make them respect the fundamental
rights of the appellants. Prisoners are not non-persons. The
American Court has taken the view and we agree with it even
on the basis of our Constitution:
"the responsible prison authorities .. have
abandoned elemental concepts of decency by
permitting conditions to prevail of a shocking and
debased nature, then the courts must intervene and
intervene promptly to restore the primal rules of
a civilized community in accord with the mandate
of the Constitution of the United States."
(257 F. Supp. 674 (S. D. Cal. 1966)
Justice Douglas, speaking of American prisons in Sweeney v.
Wood all, (1) observed:
"(Petitioner) offered to prove that he was
stripped to his waist and forced to work in the
broiling sun all the day long without a rest
period.
He offered to prove that on entrance to the prison
he was forced to serve as a "gal-boy" or female for
homosexuals among the prisoners.
Lurid details are offered in support of these main
charges. If any of them is true, (petitioner) has been
subjected to cruel and usual punishment in the past and
can be expected upon his return to have the same awful
treatment visited upon him.
....If the allegations of the petition are true,
this (petitioner) must suffer torture and mutilation or
risk of death itself to get relief in Alabama.
314 US. 86 (1952).
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....I rebel at the thought that any human
being....should be forced to run a gamut of blood and
terror....to get his constitutional rights."
Our prisons are not laudably different even in the matter of
homosexuality. The point of no return in social defence
arrives if imprisonment is not geared to therapeutic goals.
On release such an offender is ’caught in a "revolving door"
-leading from arrest on the street through a brief
unprofitable sojourn in jail back to the street and
eventually another arrest. The jails overcrowded and put to
use for which they are not suitable have a destructive
effect upon.... inmates.’ The appellants are militant men in
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a hurry with revolutionary zeal and the good of the society
at heart insisting on social justice which under the Indian
Sun is specialising on slow motion. They are violent and
need to be weened off this self-defeating weapon.
And one harrowing thought relevant to sentence and with
a grim bearing on prison treatment is that some of these
convicts arc. ’children’ by definition in the Saurashtra
Children Act(1) although a year or so older than ’children’
under the Andhra Children Act. Were they tried in Gujarat as
’children’ they would have been neither in a criminal court
nor in prison. This has a vicarious impact on the sentencing
discretion. More importantly, these adolescents when ushered
into jail with sex-starved ’Lepers’ sprinkled about, become
homosexual offerings with nocturnal dog-fights. These
unspeakable prison facts perhaps receive. indifferent
attention on Home Ministry files but must weigh with the
court in inducing it to direct that the young incarcerates
are separated dusk-to-dawn from sadistic adults. We direct
the superintendent to do so, in the expansive powers under
Sec. 482 Cr. P. Code.
Having regard to these circumstances, we direct that
these prisoners be oriented on a humane course, be treated
as ’B’ class prisoners, allowed opportunities of improving
themselves and nourishing their minds with wholesome reading
so that on return thence they turn a new leaf retaining the
flavour of their self-sacrificing spirit to change ’the
sorry scheme of things entire’ but without blood-letting
barbarities and boomeranging terrorism. Recreational
opportunities and other factors which will improve, rather
than injure must be brought into play when dealing with
these prisoners. These observations in the direction of
prison reforms are relevant for the whole jail system, still
of Raj vintage, because conditions there leave much to be
desired in
(1) Act XXI of 1954, S. 4(d).
2-520SCI/78
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the matter of humanism and correctionalism. We are aware
that there is a hopeful awakening on the part of the
Government at the Central and State levels towards
hospitalisation effect as against ’zoological’ impact. If
our observations did catalyse this trend it were good. After
all, the Constitutional culture of our country imposes this
obligation, as we have briefly indicated. Prison justice is
part of social justice.
S.R. Appeal dismissed.
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