Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF HARYANA & OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MOHINDER SINGH
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 07/02/2000
BENCH:
S.S.Ahmad, D.P.Wadhwa
JUDGMENT:
D.P. WADHWA, J.
Leave granted.
In five of the appeals (arising from SLP (Crl.)
Nos.1810/99, 145/2000, 1812/99, 2033-34/99 and 2151/99) out
of the batch of six question involved is if the respondent,
a convict, is entitled to remission of his sentence for the
period during which he is on bail. In the sixth appeal
(arising from SLP (Crl.) 643/99) question is if the
prisoner, who is convicted of an offence under Section 376
of Indian Penal Code (IPC), though confined in jail, is
entitled to remission of his sentence when the Government
circular issued under Section 432 of the Code of Criminal
procedure (’Code’ for short) does not grant such remission
to an inmate who has been convicted under Section 376, IPC.
High Court in batch of five appeals observed that conviction
and sentence are two separate terms and that the moment a
person is convicted he becomes stigmatic. High Court said
that at that point of time he is a convict and if he has
been granted bail by the appellate court it is by virtue of
provision of Section 389 of the Code and his sentence stands
suspended and not that his conviction is suspended and that
with the dismissal of appeal of such convict stigma of
conviction is not wiped of. High Court was, therefore, of
the opinion that such a convict would be entitled to
remission for the period he was on bail when the circular
gave the benefit of remission to a prisoner on
parole/furlough. High Court gave direction to the State
Government to reconsider the case of the convict who, it
said, should be entitled to the remission as per the
circular during the period he was on bail. In the sixth
appeal (arising from SLP (Crl.) No.643/99), where the
respondent was convicted for an offence under Section 376
IPC, High Court considered various provisions of the Punjab
Jail Manual as applicable in the State of Haryana (paras
634, 635 and 637 of the Jail Manual) and held that the
prisoner in this case was also entitled to remission as was
granted to those prisoners who were on parole/furlough or
were in jail on the date of the circular granting remission.
Before we consider the rival contentions it would be
appropriate to set out the circulars granting remission to
the prisoners. These circulars have been issued under
Section 432 of the Code and their language is same. They
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were issued on different dates on July 22, 1987; March 16,
1988; August 14, 1989; August 14, 1991; January 29, 1992;
April 29, 1993; and August 14, 1995. First such circular
dated July 22, 1987 is applicable from July 6, 1987 and is
as under: -
"In exercise of the powers conferred under section 432
of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973, the Governor of
Haryana hereby grants special remission to the prisoners who
happen to be confined in Jails in the State of Haryana on
6th July, 1987 and who have been convicted by Civil Courts
of criminal jurisdiction (Criminal Court of Competent
Jurisdiction?) in the State of Haryana. The remission is
granted on the following scale: -
Remission
i) Those who have been sentenced for a period
exceeding 10 years 1 year
ii) Those who have been sentenced for a period
exceeding 2 years and upto 10 years 6 months
iii) Those who have been sentenced for a period upto 2
years 3 months
Provided that:
i) No remission will be granted to persons convicted
of rape or dowry deaths.
ii) The remission will not exceed 1/4th of the period
of sentence.
iii) The minimum effective imprisonment will be three
months (or less where the actual sentence is less than 3
months)
2. Remission will also be granted to all the convicts
who were on parole/furlough from the jail on 6th July, 1987
subject to the condition that they surrender at the jail on
the due date after the expiry of parole/furlough period for
undergoing unexpired portions of their sentences.
3. Sentence of imprisonment imposed in default of
payment of the fine shall not be treated as substantive for
the purpose of grant of this remission.
4. All the prisoners convicted by Civil Courts of
criminal jurisdiction (Criminal Court of Competent
Jurisdiction?) in Haryana but undergoing their sentences in
jails outside Haryana shall be entitled to the grant of
remission on the above scale.
5. The remission will not be admissible to: -
i) Detenus of any class.
ii) The persons sentenced under the Foreigners Act
1948 and the Passport Act, 1967;
iii) Pakistani Nationals;
iv) The persons sentenced under Section 2 and 3 of
Criminal Law Amendment Act, 1961 and section 121 to 130 of
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the Indian Penal Code, 1860;
v) The persons sentenced under section 3, 4, 5, 6 to
10 of the Official Secrets Act, 1930;
vi) The persons imprisoned for failing to give
security for keeping peace for their good behaviour under
sections 107/109 of the Criminal Procedure Code, 1973;
vii) The persons who committed any major jail offence
during the last two years and were punished of for the same
under the relevant provisions of Punjab Jail Manual; and
viii) The persons who got the benefit of such a
remission during the past one year from 6.7.87. The grant
of this remission to life convicts will not effect the
provisions of section 433-A Cr.P.C.
Dated Chandigarh. M.C. GUPTA the 22.7.87 Financial
Commissioner & Secy. to Govt. Haryana, Jails Department."
Section 432 of the Code under which circular has been
issued we reproduce
"432. Power to suspend or remit sentences. (1)
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 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
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by any 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 Sec. 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."
Article 161 of the Constitution also grants power to
the Governor to grant pardons, etc. Though that Article may
not be quite relevant in the present appeals but we may note
the same
"161. Power of Governor to grant pardons, etc. and
to suspend, remit or commute sentences in certain cases.
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."
It is not disputed that the circulars have been issued
by the State Government in the exercise of powers conferred
under Section 432 of the Code. Its authority to issue the
circulars has not been questioned. From the language of the
circular aforesaid it is relevant to note three points for
the purpose of these appeals: (1) It grants special
remission to the prisoners, who are confined in jails in the
State of Haryana on July 6, 1987 (2) Remission is also to be
granted to all the convicts who are even on parole/furlough
from the jail on July 6, 1987 (3) The remission of sentence
cannot be granted to prisoners convicted of rape or dowry
deaths.
The circular granting remission is authorised under
the law. It prescribes limitations both as regards the
prisoners who are eligible and those who have been excluded.
Conditions for remission of sentence to the prisoners who
are eligible are also prescribed by the circular. Prisoners
have no absolute right for remission of their sentence
unless except what is prescribed by law and the circular
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issued thereunder. That special remission shall not apply
to a prisoner convicted of a particular offence can
certainly be relevant consideration for the State Government
not to exercise power of remission in that case. Power of
remission, however, cannot be exercised arbitrarily.
Decision to grant remission has to be well informed,
reasonable and fair to all concerned.
Terms bail, furlough and parole have different
connotations. Bail is well understood in criminal
jurisprudence. Provisions of bail are contained in Chapter
XXXIII of the Code. It is granted by the officer-in-charge
of a police station or by the court when a person is
arrested and is accused of an offence other than
non-bailable offence. Court grants bail when a person
apprehends arrest in case of non-bailable offence or is
arrested of a non-bailable offence. When a person is
convicted of an offence he can be released on bail by the
appellate court till his appeal is decided. If he is
acquitted his bail bonds are discharged and if appeal
dismissed he is taken into custody. Bail can be granted
subject to conditions. It does not appear to be quite
material that during the pendency of appeal though his
sentence is suspended he nevertheless remains a convict.
For the exercise of powers under Section 432 it may perhaps
be relevant that the State Government may remit the whole or
any part of the punishment to which a person has been
sentenced even though his appeal against conviction and
sentence was pending at that time. Appeal in that case
might have to abate inasmuch as the person convicted has to
accept the conditions on which State Government remits the
whole or in part of his punishment.
In Dictionary of American Penology, by Vergil L.
Williams ’furlough’ is described as under "Furloughs are
variously known as temporary leaves, home visits, or
temporary community release. For decades, prisons have
occasionally granted short furloughs to inmates who were
suddenly faced with a severe family crisis such as a death
or grave illness in the immediate family. Furloughs of that
type are treated as special circumstances, and often the
inmate must be accompanied by an officer as part of the
terms of the temporary release".
In the article ’Furlough Programs and Conjugal
Visiting in Adult Correctional Institutions’ by Carson W.
Markley in Volume "Federal Probation" it is mentioned that
"the term ’furlough’ is frequently confused with special
leave, which most adult institutions have long been willing
to grant under extenuating circumstances, such as family
crises. A prisoner on special leave customarily travels
under escort, while on furlough he is on his own".
’Furlough’ according to Black’s Law Dictionary (6th edn.)
means "a leave of absence; e.g. a temporary leave of
absence to one in the armed service of the country; an
employee placed in a temporary status without duties and pay
because of lack of work or funds or for other non-
disciplinary reasons. Also the document granting leave of
absence." According to The Concise Oxford Dictionary (new
edition) "Furlough" means : "leave of absence, esp.
granted to a member of the services or to a missionary".
Parole is defined in these two dictionaries as under : The
Concise Oxford Dictionary New Edition "The release of a
prisoner temporarily for a special purpose or completely
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before the expiry of a sentence, on the promise of good
behaviour; such a promise, a word of honour". Black’s Law
Dictionary Sixth Edition "Release from Jail, prison or
other confinement after actually serving part of sentence;
conditional release from imprisonment which entitles parolee
to serve remainder of his term outside confines of an
institution, if he satisfactorily complies with all terms
and conditions provided in parole order. " In Poonam Lata
vs. M.L. Wadhawan and others (1987 (3) SCC 347) this Court
was considering the nature and scope of parole in a case of
preventive detention. It said: -- "There is no denying of
the fact that preventive detention is not punishment and the
concept of serving out a sentence would not legitimately be
within the purview of preventive detention. The grant of
parole is essentially an executive function and instances of
release of detenus on parole were literally unknown until
this Court and some of the High Courts in India in recent
years made orders of release on parole on humanitarian
considerations. Historically ’parole’ is a concept known to
military law and denotes release of a prisoner of war on
promise to return. Parole has become an integral part of
the English and American systems of criminal justice
intertwined with the evolution of changing attitudes of the
society towards crime and criminals. As a consequence of
the introduction of parole into the penal system, all
fixed-term sentences of imprisonment of above 18 months are
subject to release on licence, that is, parole after a third
of the period of sentence has been served. In those
countries parole is taken as an act of grace and not as a
matter of right and the convict prisoner may be released on
condition that he abides by the promise. It is a
provisional release from confinement but is deemed to be a
part of the imprisonment. Release on parole is a wing of
the reformative process and is expected to provide
opportunity to the prisoner to transform himself into a
useful citizen. Parole is thus a grant of partial liberty
or lessening of restrictions to a convict prisoner, but
release on parole does not change the status of the
prisoner. Rules are framed providing supervision by parole
authorities of the convicts released on parole and in case
of failure to perform the promise, the convict released on
parole is directed to surrender to custody. (See The Oxford
Companion to Law, edited by Walker, 1980 edn., p.931;
Black’s Law Dictionary, 5th edn., p.1006; Jowitt’s
Dictionary of English Law, 2nd edn., Vol. 2, p.1320;
Kenny’s Outlines of Criminal Law, 17th edn., pp.574-76; The
English Sentencing System by Sir Rupert Cross at pp.31-34,
87 et. seq.; American Jurisprudence, 2nd edn., Vol. 59,
pp.53-61; Corpus Juris Secundum, Vol. 67; Probation and
Parole, Legal and Social Dimensions by Louis P. Carney.) It
follows from these authorities that parole is the release of
a very long term prisoner from a penal or correctional
institution after he has served a part of his sentence under
the continuous custody of the State and under conditions
that permit his incarceration in the event of misbehaviour.
Para 20.8 in Chapter XX dealing with "System of
Remission, Leave and Premature Release" of the Report of the
All India Committee on Jail Reforms, 1980-83 (Volume I)
refers to leave which can be granted to the petitioner. The
relevant portion is as under : "Different concepts such as
parole, furlough, ticket of leave, home leave, etc., are
used in different States to denote grant of leave or
emergency release to a prisoner from prison. The
terminology used is not uniform and is thus confusing.
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There is also no uniformity with regard to either the
grounds on which leave is sanctioned or the level of
authority empowered to sanction it. There is also a lot of
diversity in the procedure for grant of leave. The scales
at which these leaves are granted also differ from State to
State; for example in some States parole is granted for a
period extending upto 15 days while in other States it is
restricted to 10 days only."
’Furlough’ and ’parole’ are two distinct terms now
being used in the Jail Manuals or laws relating to temporary
release of prisoners. These two terms have acquired
different meanings in the statute with varied results.
Dictionary meanings, therefore, are not quite helpful. In
this connection we may refer to the Haryana Good Conduct
Prisoners (Temporary Release) Act, 1988 which has repealed
the Punjab Good Conduct Prisoners (Temporary Release) Act,
1962. Punjab Act was earlier applicable in the State of
Haryana. Language of both the Acts is same and it may be
useful to refer Sections 3 and 4 of any of these two Acts to
understand the difference between parole and furlough: -
"3. Temporary release of prisoners on certain
grounds. (1) The State Government may, in consultation
with the District Magistrate or any other officer appointed
in this behalf, by notification in the Official Gazette and
subject to such conditions and in such manner as may be
prescribed, release temporarily for a period specified in
sub-section (2), any prisoner, if the State Government is
satisfied that
(a) a member of the prisoner’s family had died or is
seriously ill or the prisoner himself is seriously ill; or
(b) the marriage of prisoner himself, his son,
daughter, grandson, grand-daughter, brother, sister sister’s
son or daughter is to be celebrated; or
(c) the temporary release of the prisoner is necessary
for ploughing, sowing or harvesting or carrying on any other
agricultural operation on his land or his father’s undivided
land actually in possession of the prisoner; or
(d) it is desirable to do so for any other sufficient
cause.
(2) The period for which a prisoner may be released
shall be determined by the State Government so as not to
exceed
(a) where the prisoner is to be released on the ground
specified in clause (a) of sub-section (1), three weeks;
(b) where the prisoner is to be released on the ground
specified in clause (b) or clause (d) of sub- section (1),
four weeks; and
(c) where the prisoner is to be released on the ground
specified in clause (c) of sub-section (1), six weeks:
Provided that the temporary release under clause (c)
can be availed more than once during the year, which shall
not, however, cumulatively exceed six weeks.
(3) The period of release under this section shall not
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count towards the total period of sentence of a prisoner.
(4) The State Government may, by notification,
authorise any officer to exercise its powers under this
section in respect of all or any other ground specified
thereunder.
4. Temporary release of prisoners on furlough. (1)
The State Government or any other officer authorised by it
in this behalf may, in consultation with such other officer
as may be appointed by the State Government, by
notification, and subject to such conditions and in such
manner as may be prescribed, release temporarily, on
furlough, any prisoner who has been sentenced to a term of
imprisonment of not less than four years and who
(a) has, immediately before the date of his temporary
release, undergone continuous imprisonment for a period of
three years, inclusive of the pre-sentence detention, if
any;
(b) has not during such period committed any jail
offence (except an offence punished by a warning) and has
earned at least three annual good conduct remissions:
Provided that nothing herein shall apply to a prisoner
who
(i) is a habitual offender as defined in sub- section
(3) of section 2 of Punjab Habitual Offenders (Control and
Reform) Act, 1952; or
(ii) has been convicted of dacoity or such other
offence as the State Government may, by notification,
specify.
(2) The period of furlough for which a prisoner is
eligible under sub-section (1) shall be three weeks during
the first year of his release and two weeks during each
successive year thereafter.
(3) Subject to the provisions of clause (d) of sub-
section (3) of section 8 the period of release referred to
in sub-section (1) shall count towards the total period of
the sentence undergone by a prisoner."
It would be thus seen that when a prisoner is on
parole his period of release does not count towards the
total period of sentence while when he is on furlough he is
eligible to have the period of release counted towards the
total period of his sentence undergone by him. Delhi Jail
Manual also uses the same terminology which we may set out
as under: -
"Part I (Parole) 1.(i) A prisoner may be released on
parole for such period as government may order in cases of
serious illness or death of any member of prisoner’s family
or his nearest relatives. For this purpose the prisoner’s
family or his nearest relatives mean his/her parents,
brothers, sisters, wife/husband and children. A prisoner
may similarly be released on parole to arrange for the
marriage of his issue for a period of not exceeding four
weeks. (ii) The period spent on parole will not count as
part of the sentence. 2. ... 3. ... Part II (Furlough)
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1.(i) A prisoner who is sentenced to 5 years or more of
rigorous imprisonment and who has actually undergone three
years imprisonment excluding remission may be released on
furlough. The first spell may be of three weeks and
subsequent spells of two weeks each, per annum, provided
that (a) his conduct in jail has been good; he has earned
three Annual Good Conduct Remissions and provided further
that he continues to earn good conduct remission or
maintains good conduct. (b) that he is not a habitual
offender; (c) that he is not convicted of robbery with
violence, dacoity and arson; (d) that he is not such a
person whose presence is considered highly dangerous or
prejudicial to public peace and tranquility by the District
Magistrate of his home district. (ii) The period of
furlough will count as sentence undergone except any such
period during which the prisoner commits an offence outside.
2 to 6 ..."
Chapter XX of the Punjab Jail Manual as applicable in
the State of Haryana contains remission system. Paras 633,
633-A, 635, 637, 644 and 645 are relevant for our purpose
which we set out hereunder: -
"633. Cases in which ordinary remission not earned.
No ordinary remission shall be earned in the following
cases, namely: -
(1) in respect of any sentence of imprisonment
amounting, exclusive of any sentence passed in default of
payment of fine, to less than three months;
(2) in respect of any sentence of simple imprisonment
except for any continuous period not being less than one
month during which the prisoner labours voluntarily:
633-A. Ordinary remission not earnable for certain
offences committed after admission to jail. If a prisoner
is convicted of an offence committed after admission to jail
under section 147, 148, 152, 224, 302, 304, 304-A, 306, 307,
308, 323, 324, 325, 326, 332, 333, 352, 353 or 377 of the
Indian Penal Code, or of an assault committed after
admission to Jail on a warder or other officer or under
section 6 of the Good Conduct Prisoners Probational Release
Act, 1926 (X of 1926), the remission of whatever kind earned
by him under these rules up to the date of the said
conviction may, with the sanction of the Inspector-General
of Prisons, be cancelled.
635. Scale of award of remission. Ordinary
remission shall be awarded on the following scale: -
(a) two days per month for thoroughly good conduct and
scrupulous attention to all prison regulations.
(b) two days per month for industry and the due
performance of the daily task imposed.
637. Application of remission of system. Subject
to the provisions of paragraph 634 remission under paragraph
635 shall be calculated from the first day of the calendar
month next following the date of prisoner’s sentence; any
prisoner who after having been released on bail or because
its sentence has been temporarily suspended is afterwards
readmitted in the jail shall be brought under the remission
system on the first day of the calendar month next following
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his re-admission, but shall be credited on his return to
jail with any remission which he may have earned previous to
his release on bail or the suspension of his sentence.
Remission under paragraph 636 shall be calculated from the
first day of the next calendar month following the
appointment of the prisoner as convict warder, convict
overseer or convict night watchman.
644. Special remission. (1) Special remission may
be given to any prisoner whether entitled to ordinary
remission or not other than a prisoner undergoing a sentence
referred to in paragraph 632, for special service as for
example.
For the existing para the following shall be
substituted.
(1) Special remission may be given to any prisoner
whether entitled to ordinary remission or not other than a
prisoner undergoing a sentence referred to in paragraph 632,
for special services as for example:
(a) assisting in detecting or preventing breaches of
prison discipline or regulations,
(b) success in teaching handicrafts,
(c) special excellence in, or greatly increased
out-turn of work of good quality,
(d) protecting an officer of the prison from attack,
(e) assisting an officer of the prison in the case of
outbreak of fire or similar emergency,
(f) economy in wearing clothes,
(g) donating blood to the Blood Bank provided that the
scale of special remission for this service shall be fifteen
days for each occasion on which blood is donated subject to
the limit laid down in sub-para (3),
(f) voluntarily undergoing vasectomy operation by a
prisoner, having three children, provided that the scale of
special remission for such service shall be 30 days, subject
to the limits laid down in sub-para (3).
(2) Special remission may also be given to any
prisoner released under the Good Conduct Prisoners’
Probational Release Act, 1926 for special services as:
(i) Special excellence in, of greatly increased
out-turn or good quality,
(ii) Assisting employer in case of out-break or fire
or protecting his life or property from theft and other
meritorious services.
(3) Special remission may be awarded: -
(i) by the Superintendent to an amount not exceeding
three days in one year.
(ii) by the Chief Probation Officer in the case of
prisoners released under the provisions of the Good Conduct
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Prisoners’ Probational Release Act, 1926 to an amount not
exceeding 30 days in one year.
(iii) by the Inspector-General of the Local Government
to an amount not exceeding sixty days in one year.
EXPLANATION: - For the purpose of this rule, years
shall be reckoned from the date of sentence and any fraction
of a year shall be reckoned as a complete year.
(4) An award of special remission shall be entered on
the history ticket of the prisoner as soon as possible after
it is made, and the reasons for every award of special
remission by a Supdt. shall be briefly recorded, and in
case of prisoners released under the Good Conduct Prisoners’
Probational Release Act, 1926, such entries and reasons
thereof shall be recorded by the Probation Officer.
645. Total remission not to exceed one-fourth part of
sentence. The total remission awarded to a prisoner under
all these rules shall not without the special sanction of
the Local Government, exceed one-fourth part of his
sentence.
Provided in every exceptional and suitable cases the
Inspector-General of Prisons may grant remission amounting
to not more than one-third of the total sentence."
When a circular specifically applies to the prisoners
who are undergoing sentence and are confined in jail and
even to those who are on parole or furlough we cannot extend
this circular to convicts who are on bail and thus carve out
another category to which Court is not entitled under
Section 432 of the Code. As noted above, validity of the
circular has not been challenged on any other ground.
In the case of Harphool Singh, who was convicted of
rape, circular specifically is not applicable to the
prisoner convicted of an offence of rape or other dowry
offences. Perhaps, this provision was not brought to the
notice of the High Court when it held that circular would
also apply in the case of Harphool Singh. It was submitted
by Mr. Dayan Krishan, learned amicus curiae that
nevertheless Harphool Singh might have already undergone the
sentence after earning remission under the Punjab Jail
Manual and present appeal in his case would be infructuous.
It will be for the State Government to consider, if Harphool
Singh has served out his sentence in normal course without
getting any remission under the circular on the basis of the
impugned judgment of the High Court. It is not disputed
that Harphool Singh has already got benefit of remission to
which he was entitled under Chapter XX of the Punjab Jail
Manual. He is certainly not entitled to remission under the
circular as that is not applicable to a person convicted of
an offence under Section 376 IPC.
From para 637 as reproduced above a convict on bail is
not entitled to the benefit of remission system. In fact
question is no longer res integra as it is covered by the
decision of this Court in Jai Prakash and others vs. State
of Haryana and others (1987 (4) SCC 296). While considering
the scope of para 637 this Court held: --
"On a reading of the aforesaid provision it is
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manifest that a prisoner who has been released on bail or
whose sentence has been temporarily suspended and has
afterwards been re-admitted in jail will be brought under
remission system on the first day of the calendar month next
following his re- admission. In other words, a prisoner is
not eligible for remission of sentence during the period he
is on bail or his sentence is temporarily suspended. The
submission that the petitioners who were temporarily
released on bail are entitled to get the remission earned
during the period they were on bail, is not at all
sustainable."
In the appeals where the convicts were on bail High
Court in the impugned judgments relied on a decision of this
Court in Nalamolu Appala Swamy and others vs. State of
Andhra Pradesh (1989 Supp. (2) SCC 192) where this Court
observed as under: -
"We find merit in the contention because the scheme of
remission formulated under the GO is with reference to the
period of sentence actually undergone by different classes
of prisoners and in the case of some the period of actual
sentence together with the remissions earned for reckoning
the total sentence. The GO does not stipulate that in order
to get the benefit of remission the prisoners must actually
be in jail on the date the GO was issued."
Decision of this Court in the case of Nalamolu Appala
Swamy aforesaid, however turns on the facts of that case.
The GO which granted remission has not been set out in the
judgment though the judgment noticed that GO has been issued
by the Government for granting remission to certain
categories of prisoners "to commemorate the occasion of the
anniversary of formation of the Andhra Pradesh State on
November 1, 1984 and the restoration of democratic rule in
the State". The Court also noticed the argument of the
appellants that GO nowhere sets out that benefit of
remission would be confined to prisoners who were actually
in jail on the date of the GO and not to others who were on
bail. We are of the opinion that the High Court was not
right in the judgments impugned in these appeals holding
that the respondents were entitled to remission of their
sentences under the circulars in question issued under
Section 432 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. These
appeals are, therefore, allowed and the impugned judgments
of the High Court are set aside. We place on record our
appreciation of the valuable assistance rendered to us by
Mr. Dayan Krishnan, Advocate who appeared as amicus curiae.