Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF PUNJAB AND ORS. ETC. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
JOGINDER SINGH AND ORS. ETC. ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT23/03/1990
BENCH:
AHMADI, A.M. (J)
BENCH:
AHMADI, A.M. (J)
FATHIMA BEEVI, M. (J)
CITATION:
1990 AIR 1396 1990 SCR (2) 147
1990 SCC (2) 661 JT 1990 (2) 323
1990 SCALE (1)610
ACT:
Manual for the Superintendence and Management of Jails
in Punjab.’ Paragraphs 516-B and 631--Whether statutory in
character-Interpretation of--Remission of sentence--Grant
of--Powers and fetters.
Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973.’ Sections 432, 433 and
433A-Sentence--Suspension, remission and
commutation--Grant Punjab Jail Manual-Paragraphs 516B and
631--Interpretation of.
HEADNOTE:
Paragraph 516-B of the Manual for the Superintendence
and Management of Jails in Punjab provides for premature
release of prisoners. The State Government had issued in-
structions in 1971 modifying the executive instructions in
paragraph 516B, to the effect that a convict must have
undergone 8 1/2 years of substantive sentence before his
case could be submitted to the Government for consideration.
Again there was another executive instruction in 1976 which
provided that cases of convicts who were sentenced to death
and whose sentences were subsequently commuted to life
imprisonment would not be submitted to the State Government
for consideration unless the convict has undergone atleast
14 years of substantive imprisonment.
Paragraph 631 of the said Manual relates to remission of
sentences. The note below paragraph 631 reproduces the gist
of paragraph 516-B.
Going by the preface of the Manual, paragraph 631 has
statutory force whereas paragraph 5 16B being in the nature
of executive instruction has no statutory force.
The respondents filed Criminal Writ Petitions before the
High Court praying for their premature release on the basis
that the note under paragraph 631 has statutory force, the
executive instructions issued in 1971 and 1976 have to be
ignored and that the Jail Superintendent was bound to submit
their cases to the Government for premature release.
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The High Court allowed the claim of the respondents and
held that the executive instructions issued in 1971 and 1976
being in conflict with the statutory note must give way to
the latter.
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These appeals, by special leave, preferred by the State
Government challenge the High Court’s decision on the ground
that the source of paragraphs 516 and the note at the foot
of paragraph 631 being the same, viz., resolution dated 6th
September, 1905, it cannot be concluded that the note being
an integral part of the statutory rule incorporated in
paragraph 631 must receive the same character and in case of
conflict between the two, the note which is statutory in
character must prevail.
Allowing the appeals, this Court,
HELD: 1. Remissions by way of reward or otherwise cannot
cut down the sentence awarded by the Court except under
Section 432 of the Criminal Procedure Code or in exercise of
constitutional power under Article 72/161 of the Constitu-
tion. Remission cannot detract from the quantum and quality
of the judicial sentence except to the extent permitted by
Section 432 of the Code, subject of course to Section 433A,
or where the clemency power under the Constitution is in-
voked. The power under Articles 72 and 161 of the Constitu-
tion is absolute and cannot be lettered by any statutory
provision such as Sections 432, 433 and 433A of the Code.
This power cannot be altered, modified or interfered with in
any manner whatsoever by any statutory provisions or Prison
Rules. [153H; 154A-C]
2. Remission schemes are introduced to ensure prison
discipline and good behaviour and not to upset sentences. If
the sentence is of imprisonment for life, ordinarily the
convict has to pass the remainder of his life in prison but
remissions and commutations are granted in exercise of power
under Sections 432 and 433 Cr.P.C., carving out an exception
in the category of those convicts who have already enjoyed
the generosity of executive power on the commutation of
death sentence to one of life imprisonment. Even in such
cases Section 433A of the Code or the executive instruction
of 1976 does not insist that the convict pass the remainder
of his life in prison but merely insists that he shall have
served time for at least 14 years. In the case of other
’lifers’ the insistence under the 1971 amendment is that he
should have a period of atleast 8-1/2 years of incarceration
before release. The 1976 amendment was possibly introduced
to make the remission scheme consistent with Section 433A of
the Code. Since Section 433A is prospective, so also
149
would be the 1971 and 1976 amendments. [154E-H]
Gopal Vinayak Godse v. State of Maharashtra, [1961] 3
SCR 440 and Maru Ram v. Union of India, [1981] 1 SCR 1196,
relied on.
3. According to the preface only those paragraphs which
are blacklined have statutory character. The note in ques-
tion is not so blacklined. The source of paragraph 516B and
the note is the very same Resolution No. 159-167 of the
Government of India dated 6th September, 1905. It is diffi-
cult to believe that the same resolution was intended to be
a mere executive instruction in one part of the Manual and
was intended to be conferred a statutory character in anoth-
er. The marginal note to the Note in question in terms
refers to paragraph 516-B which means it was merely a repro-
duction of the latter paragraph. In the circumstances, if
the note was intended to be conferred a statutory character,
it would have been blacklined in keeping with the scheme of
the Manual. Paragraph 631 classifies prisoners and fixes the
duration of their sentences e.g., 20 years for life convicts
and class 3 prisoners and 25 years for class 1 and 2 prison-
ers. The note at the foot of the paragraph is by way of a
reminder that notwithstanding the duration fixed under the
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said rule, paragraph 5 16B requires that cases of such
prisoners should be submitted on the expiry of the duration
fixed under paragraph 516B. It is, therefore, clear that the
note is neither an integral part of paragraph 631; nor does
it have statutory flavour as held by the High Court. [155B-
F]
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal Nos. 7
18-7 19/81 & 205-2 12, 2 13- 2 17 & 204 of 1990.
From the Judgments and Order dated 29.4.1981, 22.5.1981
& 29.4. 1981 of the Punjab and Haryana High Court in Crl.
W.P. Nos. 38 & 46, 80-84, 86-88 & 40 of 1981.
R.S. Suri, Mr. Mohan Pandey and R.P. Singh for the Appel-
lants.
S.Srinivasan and C.L. Sahu Amicus Curiae for the Respond-
ents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
AHMADI, J. Special leave granted in all the above matters.
These appeals involve the interpretation of paragraphs
516-B and 631 of the Manual for the Superintendence and
Management of
150
Jails in the Punjab. The preface to the Manual shows that
those paragraphs of the Manual against which a black line
appears are, in substance, either quotations from the law,
or, from the Rules having the force of law, the authority
having been indicted on the upper right hand margin of each
paragraph whereas the paragraphs which have not been black-
lined are executive instructions issued from time to time by
the Government of India, or the Local Government or the
Inspector-General with the sanction and approval of the
Local Government. It may at once be mentioned that paragraph
5 16-B contained in Chapter XV entitled ’Release of Prison-
ers’ is not blacklined while paragraph 631 contained in
Chapter XX entitled ’Remission System’ is blacklined. The
note in the upper right hand margin of paragraph 516B refers
to G of I Resolution No. 159-167 dated 6th September, 1905
and P.G. No. 18608--Jails-dated 28th June, 1920. There is no
dispute that this paragraph contains an executive instruc-
tion only. Paragraph 631 contains a note on the upper right
hand margin referring to the G of I Resolution No. 161-172
of 2nd May, 1908 and P.G. Letter No. 1669-S (Home) of 31st
July, 1908. At the foot of paragraph 631 is a ’Note’ in
small type with a right hand marginal note See para 5 16B’.
While there can be no controversy that paragraph 631 which
is blacklined has statutory force, the question is whether
the Note at the foot thereof, which is not blacklined, also
has statutory force.
Paragraph 5 16-B provides that the case of every con-
victed prisoner (except females and males below 20 years at
the date of the commission of the crime) sentenced to im-
prisonment for life or imprisonment aggregating to over 14
years and who has undergone a period of detention in Jail
amounting, together with remission earned, to 14 years,
’shall be’ submitted to the State Government, through the
Inspector General of Prisons, for orders. In the case of
female prisoners or prisoners who were below 20 years on the
date of commission of the crime, reference is required to be
similarly made to the State Government on their completing a
detention period of 10 years inclusive of remissions. Clause
(v), however, provides that notwithstanding anything con-
tained in the earlier part of the paragraph, a Superintend-
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ent of jail ’may’, in his discretion, refer at any time, for
the orders of the State Government, the case of any prisoner
sentenced to imprisonment for life whose sentence might in
the Superintendent’s opinion be suitably commuted to a term
of imprisonment. It would appear from a plain reading of
this paragraph that in the case of a prisoner who has com-
pleted 14 years of detention in jail. inclusive remissions
earned, it is imperative on the part of the Superintendent
of
151
the Jail to submit his case, through the I.G. of Prisons, to
the State Government for consideration. The use of the words
’shall be submitted’ bring out this intention when we con-
trast them with the word ’may’ and the words ’in his discre-
tion’ used in clause (v) thereto which begins with a non-
obstante clause. Therefore, where the intention was to
confer a mere discretion on the Superintendent of Jail, it
was made manifest by the use of the expression ’may’ fol-
lowed by the words ’in his discretion’ and where the inten-
tion was to cast a duty to submit the case of the State
Government, it was brought out by the word ’shall’ preceding
the words ’be submitted ..... for the orders of the State
Government’. We have, therefore, no doubt in our minds that
paragraph 5 16B, though an executive instruction, has been
couched in language which clearly shows that in the former
type of cases where the prisoner has completed 14 years of
detention in jail, inclusive of remissions, his case must be
referred to the State Government for consideration. Notwith-
standing this limitation of completion of 14 years, clause
(v) confers a discretion on the Superintendent of the jail
to refer or submit the case of a prisoner to the State
Government even before he has completed 14 years if in his
opinion the case is fit for commuting the sentence.
Paragraph 631 is indisputably a statutory one as it is
blacklined. But the blacklined portion of the paragraph
merely defines certain expressions including the expression
’life convicts’ which means a person whose sentence amounts
to 20 years imprisonment. Then appears the Note which reads
as follows:
"Note: The case of all life-convicts and of all prisoners
sentenced to more than 14 years imprisonment or to transpor-
tation and imprisonment for terms exceeding in the aggregate
14 years shall, when the term of imprisonment undergone,
together with any remission earned under the rules amounts
to 10 or 14 years, as the case may be, submitted for the
orders of the Local Government in accordance with the in-
structions contained in the Home Department Resolution No.
159-167 (Jails), dated the 6th September, 1905."
(See para 516B)
It will be seen that the note merely reproduces the gist of
paragraph 5 16-B. Even the right side marginal note says
’see para 5 16-B’ and is based on the same Resolution of 6th
September, 1905 on which paragraph 5 16-B is based. The note
is not blacklined as in the case of
152
the Note below paragraph 633. It was, therefore, urged that
when paragraph 516-B is not blacklined, this note below.
paragraph 63 1, which too is not blacklined, can not be
construed to be statutory in character merely because para-
graph 631 incorporates a statutory rule.
Since the source of paragraph 5 16-B and the Note at the
foot of paragraph 631 is the same, namely, the Resolution of
6th September, 1905, counsel for the State of Punjab submit-
ted that the learned Judge in the High Court was not right
in concluding that the Note being an integral part of the
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statutory rule incorporated in paragraph 631 must receive
the same character and if there is a conflict between the
two, the note which is statutory in character must prevail.
The difficulty arises because the State Government has
issued instructions in 1971 which has the effect of modify-
ing the executive instructions in paragraph 5 16-B, in that,
it is now provided that a convict must have undergone 8-1/2
years of substantive sentence before his case for premature
release can be submitted to the State Government for consid-
eration. A further change was made by an executive instruc-
tion issued in 1976 whereby it was provided that cases of
convicts who were sentenced to death and whose sentences
were subsequently commuted to life imprisonment will not be
submitted to the State Government for consideration unless
the convict has undergone atleast 14 years of substantive
imprisonment. The High Court has taken the view that while
paragraph 5 16-B would stand amended or modified by the
subsequent executive instructions, the statutory rule con-
tained in the Note below paragraph 631 cannot be touched by
mere executive instructions and hence it still holds the
field and the Superintendent for the jail is bound to submit
the case to the State Government ignoring the change brought
about by the executive instructions of 1971 and 1976. In
other words, according to the High Court the executive
instructions of 1971 and 1976 being in conflict with the
statutory Note must give way to the latter.
Before we deal with the above question it may be advan-
tageous to refer to Sections 432,433 and 433A of the Crimi-
nal Procedure Code which have a bearing on the question of
premature release. Section 432 confers on the appropriate
Government the power to suspend the execution of the sen-
tence or remit the whole or part of the sentence with or
without conditions. Section 433 confers power on the appro-
priate Government to commute (a) a sentence of death for any
other punishment provided under the Penal Code, (b) a sen-
tence of imprisonment for life, for imprisonment for a term
not exceeding 14 years or
153
fine (c) a sentence of rigorous imprisonment, for simple
imprisonment or fine or (d) a sentence of simple imprison-
ment for fine. Section 433A provides that where an offender
is visited with a sentence of imprisonment for life for an
offence for which death is one of the punishments or where a
sentence of death is commuted under Section 433 into one of
punishment for life, such persons shall not be released from
prison unless he has served atleast 14 years of imprison-
ment. It will thus seen that Section 432 and 433 confer
powers of suspension, remission and commutation of sentences
on the appropriate Government, an expression defined in
Sub-section (7) of Section 432 of the Code.
In Gopal Vinayak Godse v. State of Maharashtra, [1961] 3
SCR 440, this Court held that a sentence of transportation
for life or imprisonment for life must be treated as trans-
portation or imprisonment for the whole of the remaining
period of the convict’s normal life, unless the said sen-
tence is commuted or remitted by the appropriate Government.
Dealing with the Rules framed under the Prisons Act, 1894,
this Court held that even though they were statutory in
character they did not confer an indefeasible right on a
prisoner sentenced to transportation for life an uncondi-
tional release on the expiry of a particular term including
remissions. It held that the rules framed under the Prisons
Act enabled a prisoner to earn remissions-ordinary, special
and State the said remissions were to be given credit to-
wards his term of imprisonment and for the purpose of work-
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ing out the remissions the sentence of transportation for
life was equated with a definite period, but it is only for
the particular purpose and not for any other purpose. Lastly
it observed that the question of remission was exclusively
within the province of the appropriate Government.
In Maru Ram v. Union of India, [1981] 1 SCR 1196 this
Court repelled the challenge to Section 433A both on the
question of competence of Parliament to enact the provision
and its constitutional validity. While interpreting Sections
432,433 and 433A of the Code, this Court pointed out that
wide powers or remission and commutation of sentences were
conferred on the appropriate government but an exception was
carved out for the extreme category of convicts who were
sentenced to death but whose sentence had been commuted
under Section 433 into one of imprisonment for life. Such a
prisoner is not to be released unless he has served atleast
14 years of imprisonment. The Court refused to read down
Section 433A to give overriding effect to the Remission
Rules of the State. It categorically ruled that Remission
Rules and like provisions stand excluded so far as ’lifers’
punished for capital offences are concerned. Remissions by
way of
154
reward or otherwise cannot cut down the sentence awarded by
the Court except under Section 432 of the Code or in exer-
cise of constitutional power under Article 72/161 of the
Constitution. Remission cannot detract from the quantum and
quality of the Judicial sentence except to the extent per-
mitted by Section 432 of the Code, subject of course to
Section 433A, or where the clemency power under the Consti-
tution is invoked. But while exercising the Constitutional
power under Article 72/161, the President or the Governor,
as the case may be, must act on the advice of the Council of
Ministers. The power under Article 72 and 161 of the Consti-
tution is absolute and cannot be lettered by any statutory
provision such as Sections 432,433 and 433A of the Code.
This power cannot be altered, modified or interfered with in
any manner whatsoever by any statutory provisions or Prison
Rules.
Now, paragraph 5 16-B requires that the case of every
convict sentenced to imprisonment for life or imprisonment
aggregating to more than 14 years and who has undergone a
period of detention in jail amounting, together with remis-
sion, to 14 years, shall be submitted to the State Govern-
ment for orders. The State Government’s instruction issued
in 1971 provides that the convict must have undergone 8-1/2
years of substantive sentence before his case could be
submitted to the Government. The other instruction issued in
1976 provides that the case of a convict who was sentenced
to death and whose sentence was subsequently commuted to
life imprisonment will not be submitted unless he has under-
gone atleast 14 years of substantive imprisonment. Remission
schemes are introduced to ensure prison discipline and good
behaviour and not to upset sentences; if the sentences is of
imprisonment for life. ordinarily the convict has to pass
the remainder of his life in prison but remissions and
commutations are granted in exercise of power under Sections
432 and 433 carving out an exception in the category of
those convicts who have already enjoyed the generosity of
executive power on the commutation of death sentence to one
of life imprisonment. Even in such cases Section 433A of the
Code or the executive instruction of 1976 does not insist
that the convict pass the remainder of his life in prison
but merely insists that he shall have served time for at-
least 14 years. In the case of other ’lifers’ the insistence
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under the 1971 amendment is that he should have a period of
atleast 81/2 years of incarceration before release. The 1976
amendment was possibly introduced to make the remission
scheme consistent with Section 433A of the Code. Since
Section 433A is prospective, so also would be the 1971 and
1976 amendments.
155
But the High Court has come to the conclusion that
Paragraph 5 16-B, as amended by the executive instructions
of 1971 and 1976, cannot override the statutory rule con-
tained in Paragraph 631 read with the note appended thereto.
Counsel for the State argued that the Note at the foot of
Paragraph 631 merely reproduces Paragraph 5 16-B; the mar-
ginal note thereto says to in no uncertain terms and, there-
fore, the Note cannot be ascribed a statutory character. We
think there is considerable force in this submission. In the
first place it must be realised that according to the pref-
ace only those paragraphs which are blacklined have statuto-
ry character. The Note in question is not so blacklined.
Where the note is intended to be given statutory character
it is blacklined, see the note at the foot of Paragraph 633.
Secondly the source of paragraph 5 16-B and the Note is the
very same Resolution No. 159-167 of the Government of India
dated 6th September, 1905. It is difficult to believe that
the same resolution was intended to be a mere executive
instruction in one part of the Manual and was intended to be
conferred a statutory character in another part of the same
Manual. Thirdly the marginal note to the Note in question in
terms refers to Paragraph 5 16-B which means it was merely a
reproduction of the latter paragraph. In the circumstances
if the Note was intended to be conferred a statutory charac-
ter, it would have been blacklined in keeping with the
scheme of the Manual. These are clear indicators which
support the submission of the learned counsel for the State.
Lastly Paragraph 631 classifies prisoners and fixes the
duration of their sentences e.g. 20 years for life convicts
and class 3 prisoners and 25 years for class 1 and 2 prison-
ers. The Note at the foot of the paragraph is by way of a
reminder that notwithstanding the duration fixed under the
said rule, Paragraph 5 16-B requires that cases of such
prisoners should be submitted on the expiry of the duration
fixed under Paragraph 5 16-B. It, therefore, seems clear to
us that the Note is neither an integral part of Paragraph
631 nor does it have statutory flavour as held by the High
Court.
We, therefore, find it difficult to uphold the view
taken by the High Court in this behalf. We may make it clear
that Paragraph 516B insofar as it stands amended or modified
by the 1971 and 1976 executive orders is prospective in
character. We allow these appeals and set aside the judgment
and Order of the High Court in each of these appeals.
G.N. Appeals allowed.
156