Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SHER SINGH & OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF PUNJAB
DATE OF JUDGMENT24/03/1983
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
TULZAPURKAR, V.D.
VARADARAJAN, A. (J)
CITATION:
1983 AIR 465 1983 SCR (2) 582
1983 SCC (2) 345
CITATOR INFO :
R 1983 SC 585 (3)
E 1985 SC 231 (3)
D 1988 SC 30 (5)
RF 1989 SC 142 (1)
APR 1989 SC1335 (1,2,28,29,51,56,66,73)
RF 1989 SC1933 (27)
R 1989 SC2299 (2)
F 1991 SC 345 (11,14,15,18)
ACT:
Constitution of India-Art. 2I-Fair procedure-Prisoner
sentenced to death-Delay in execution of sentence-Prisoner
entitled to invoke jurisdiction under Art. 21 for examining
whether it is just and fair to allow sentence to be
executed-Prisoner cannot demand that sentence of death
should be quashed and substituted by sentence of life
imprisonment-Prolonged delay is an important consideration
but several other factors must also be taken into account-No
absolute or unqualified rule can be laid down.
HEADNOTE:
The petitioners were convicted under s. 302 read with
s. 34 I.P.C. and were sentenced to death on November 26,
1977. The High Court upheld the conviction and sentence on
July 18, 1978. The petitioners’ Special Leave Petition
against the judgment of the High Court was dismissed on
March 5, 1979 and the Review Petition against the dismissal
of the Special Leave Petition was also dismissed on March
27, 1981. The petitioners’ successive writ petitions
challenging the validity of ss. 302 and 34 I.P.C. were
dismissed on January 20, 1981 and August 24, 1981
respectively. The present writ petitions were filed on March
2, 1983 on the basis of the decision in T.V. Vatheeswaran v.
State of Tamil Nadu which was rendered on February 16, 1983.
The contention on behalf of the petitioners was that
more than two years had elapsed since they were sentenced to
death by the trial court and therefore they were entitled in
terms of the ruling in vatheeswaran to demand that the said
sentence should be quashed and substituted by the sentence
of life imprisonment.
^
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HELD : Prolonged delay in the execution of a death
sentence is unquestionably an important consideration for
determining whether the sentence should be allowed to be
executed. But no hard and fast rule that "delay exceeding
two years in the execution of a sentence of death should be
considered sufficient to entitle the person under sentence
of death to invoke Art. 21 and demand the quashing of the
sentence of death" can be laid down as has been done in
Vatheeswaran. [594 E-F]
(i) No absolute or unqualified rule can be laid down
that in every case in which there is a long delay in the
execution of a death sentence, the
583
sentence must be substituted by the sentence of life
imprisonment. There are several other factors which must be
taken into account while considering the question as to
whether the death sentence should be vacated. A convict is
entitled to pursue all remedies lawfully open to him and get
rid of the sentence of death imposed upon him and his taking
recourse to them to ask for the commutation of his sentence
even after it is finally confirmed by this Court is
understandable. But, it is, at least, relevant to consider
whether the delay in the execution of the death sentence is
attributable to the fact that he has resorted to a series of
untenable proceedings which have the effect of defeating the
ends of justice. It is not uncommon that a series of review
petitions and writ petitions are filed in this Court to
challenge judgments and orders which have assumed finality,
without any seeming justification. Stay orders are obtained
in those proceedings and then, at the end of it all, comes
the argument that there has been prolonged delay in
implementing the judgment or order. The Court called upon to
vacate a death sentence on the ground of delay caused in
executing that sentence must find why the delay was caused
and who is responsible for it. If this is not done, the law
laid down by this Court will become an object of ridicule by
permitting a person to defeat it by resorting to frivolous
proceedings in order to delay its implementation. Further,
the nature of the offence, the diverse circumstances
attendant upon it, its impact upon the contemporary society
and the question whether the motivation and pattern of the
crime are such as are likely to lead to its repetition if
the death sentence is vacated, re matters which must enter
into the verdict as to whether the sentence should be
vacated for the reason that its execution is delayed. The
substitution of the death sentence by a sentence of life
imprisonment cannot follow by the application of the two
years’ formula as a matter of "quod erat demonstrandum."
[595 D-H; 596-AE]
T.V. Vatheeswaran v. State of Tamil Nadu. [1983] 2
S.C.R. 348 overruled.
(ii) The period of two years purports to have been
fixed in Vatheeswaran after making "all reasonable allowance
for the time necessary for appeal and consideration of
reprieve." It is not possible to agree with this part of the
judgment in that case. The fixation of the time limit of two
years does not accord with the common experience of the time
normally consumed by the litigative process and the
proceedings before the executive. A period far exceeding two
years is generally taken by the High Court and this Court
together for the disposal of matters involving even the
death sentence. Very often four or five years elapse between
the imposition of death sentence by the Sessions Court and
the disposal of the Special Leave Petition or an Appeal by
this Court in that matter. This is apart from the time which
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the President or the Governor, as the case may be, takes to
consider petitions filed under Art. 72 or Art. 161 of the
Constitution or the time which the Government takes to
dispose of application filed under ss. 432 and 433 of the
Code of Criminal Procedure. [594-F-H; 595-AC]
(iii) Piare Dusadh is not an authority for the
proposition that if a certain number of years have passed
since the imposition of a death sentence,
584
that sentence must necessarily be commuted to life
imprisonment. In that case the Federal Court commuted the
sentence of death to sentence of transportation for life for
reasons other than that a long delay had intervened after
the death sentence was imposed. In Ediga Anamma, Piare
Dusadh was regarded as a leading case on the point. In the
other judgments of this Court referred to in Vatheeswaran,
this Court was hearing appeals against judgments of High
Courts confirming the sentence of death. However, the Court
has not taken the narrow view that the jurisdiction to
interfere with a death sentence can be exercised only in an
appeal against the judgment of conviction and sentence. In
very recent times, the sentence of death has been commuted
to life imprisonment by this Court in quite a few cases for
the reason, inter alia, that the prisoner was under the
spectre of the sentence of death for an unduly long time
after the final confirmation of that sentence. [589 B-D-H;
590-A-D]
Piare Dusadh, [1944] F.C.R. Vol.6 61; Ediga Anamma,
[1974] 3 S.C.R. 329; Sunil Batra v. Delhi Administration,
[1979] 1 S.C.R. 392; Maneka Gandhi [1978] 2 S.C.R. 621;
Bachan Singh, [1980] 2 S.C.C. 684, Hussainara Khatoon,
[1980] 1 S.C.C. 98; Hoskot, [1978] 3 S.C.C. 544; Bhuvan
Mohan Patnaik, [1975] 2 S.C.R. 24; and Prabhakar Pandurang
Sangzgiri, [1966] 1 S.C.R. 702 referred to.
(iv) Article 21 is as much relevant at the stage of
execution of the death sentence as it is in the interregnum
between the imposition of that sentence and its execution.
The essence of the matter is that all procedure, no matter
what the stage, must be fair, just and reasonable. It is
well established that a prisoner cannot be tortured or
subjected to unfair or inhuman treatment. It is a logical
extension of the self same principle that the death
sentence, even if justifiably imposed, cannot be executed if
supervening events make its execution harsh, unjust or
unfair. A prisoner who has experienced living death for
years on end is entitled to invoke the jurisdiction of this
Court for examining the question whether, after all the
agony and torment he has been subjected to, it is just and
fair to allow the sentence of death to be executed. That is
the true implication of Art. 21 of the Constitution. [593 B-
G]
Bhuvan Mohan Patnaik, [1975] 2 S.C.R. 24; Prabhakar
Pandurang Sangzgiri, [1966] 1 S.C.R. 702; and Sunil Batra v.
Delhi Administration, [1979] 1 S.C.R. 392 referred to.
(v) Traditionally, subsequent events are taken into
account in the area of civil law. There is no reason why
they should not receive due consideration in other
jurisdictions, particularly when their relevance on the
implementation or execution of judicial verdicts is
undeniable. Principles analogous to res judicata govern all
judicial proceedings but when new situations emerge,
particularly factual, after a verdict has assumed finality
in the course of the hierarchical process, advertence to
those situations is not barred on the ground that a final
decision has been rendered already. That final decision is
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not a decision on new facts. Courts are never powerless to
do justice, that
585
is to say, to ensure that the processes of law do not result
in undue misery, suffering or hardship. That is why, even
after the final seal of approval is placed upon a sentence
of death, this Court has exercised its power to direct, ex
debito justiciae, that though the sentence was justified
when passed, its execution, in the circumstances of the
case, is not justified by reason of the unduly long time
which has elapsed since the confirmation of that sentence by
this Court. [590-E-H]
In the instant case, the sentence of death imposed upon
the petitioners by the Sessions Court and which was upheld
by the High Court and this Court cannot be vacated merely
for the reason that there has been a long delay in the
execution of that sentence. Counsel for the petitioners have
been asked to argue upon the reasons why, apart from the
delay caused in executing the death sentence, it would be
unjust and unfair to execute that sentence at this point of
time. The question will be decided after hearing the
parties. [596-G-H; 597-A-B]
2. Petitions filed under Arts. 72 and 161 of the
Constitution and under ss. 432 and 433, Cr. P.C. must be
disposed of expeditiously. A self imposed rule should be
followed by the executive authorities that every such
petition shall be disposed of within a period of three
months from the date on which it is received. [597-C]
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition Nos. 232 & 233 of
1983.
(Under article 32 of the Constitution of India)
M.S. Joshi, N.D. Garg and Rajiv Kumar Garg for the
Petitioners.
D.D. Sharma for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
CHANDRACHUD, CJ. An important question arises for
consideration in these two writ petitions. That question is
whether a delay exceeding two years in the execution of a
sentence of death must be considered sufficient for setting
aside that sentence. Learned counsel who appears on behalf
of the petitioners relies upon a decision of this Court in
T.V. Vatheeswaran v. The State of Tamil Nadu(1) and contends
that since more than two years have passed since the
petitioners were sentenced to death by the Trial Court, they
are entitled to demand that the said sentence should be
quashed and substituted by the sentence of life
imprisonment.
The petitioners, Sher Singh and Surjit Singh, and one
Kuldip Singh were convicted under section 302 read with
section 34 of the
586
Penal Code and were sentenced to death by the learned
Sessions Judge, Sangrur, on November 26, 1977. By a judgment
dated July 18, 1978 the High Court of Punjab and Haryana
reduced the sentence imposed upon Kuldip Singh to life
imprisonment but upheld the sentence of death imposed upon
the petitioners. The High Court also imposed a sentence of
fine of Rs. 5000 on Kuldip Singh and a fine of Rs. 5000 on
each of the petitioners. Special Leave Petition (Crl.) No.
1711 of 1978 which was filed by the petitioners against the
judgment of the High Court was dismissed by this Court on
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March 5, 1979. The petitioners then filed a Writ Petition in
this Court challenging the validity of section 302 of the
Penal Code. That petition was dismissed on January 20, 1981.
Review Petition No. 99 of 1981 filed by the petitioners
against the dismissal of their S.L.P. was dismissed by this
Court on March 27, 1981. The petitioners filed yet another
petition under article 32 of the Constitution, this time
challenging the validity of section 34 of the Penal Code.
That petition was dismissed on August 24, 1981. After
failing in these seemingly inexhaustible series of
proceedings, the petitioners filed these two writ petitions
on March 2, 1983, basing themselves on the decision rendered
by Justice Chinnappa Reddy and Justice R.B. Misra on
February 16, 1983 in Vatheeswaran.
The question which arose for consideration in
Vatheeswaran is formulated by Chinnappa Reddy, J., who spoke
for the Court, in these terms:
"But the question is whether in a case where after the
sentence of death is given, the accused person is made
to undergo inhuman and degrading punishment or where
the execution of the sentence is endlessly delayed and
the accused is made to suffer the most excruciating
agony and anguish, is it not open to a court of appeal
or a court exercising writ jurisdiction, in an
appropriate proceeding to take note of the circumstance
when it is brought to its notice and give relief where
necessary ?"
This question arose on the following facts as stated in
the judgment of Brother Chinnappa Reddy:
(1) The prisoner was rightly sentenced to death.
(2) He was the ’arch-villain of a villainous piece’ and
the brain behind a cruel conspiracy to impersonate
Customs officers, pretend to question unsuspecting
visi-
587
tors to the city of Madras, abduct them on the
pretext of interrogating them, administer sleeping
pills to the unsuspecting victims, steal their
cash and jewels and finally murder them. The plan
was ingeniously fiendish and the appellant was its
architect.
(3) Since January 19, 1975 when the Sessions Judge
pronounced the sentence of death, the prisoner was
kept in solitary confinement contrary to the
decision of this Court in Sunil Batra v. Delhi
Administration. (1) Before that, he was a
’prisoner under remand’ for two years.
On these facts, the argument advanced in this Court on
behalf of the prisoner was that taking away his life after
keeping him in jail for ten years, eight of which were spent
in illegal solitary confinement, is a gross violation of the
fundamental rights guaranteed by Article 21 of the
Constitution.
In Vatheeswaran, our learned Brethren have drawn
sustenance to their conclusion from one judgment of the
Federal Court of India, five judgments of this Court, one of
the Privy Council and one of the U.S. Supreme Court. As to
the meaning and implications of Article 21 of the
Constitution, they have relied upon the decisions of this
Court in Sunil Batra,(1) Maneka Gandhi,(2) Bachan Singh, (3)
Hussainara Khatoon (4) and Hoskot.(5) The judgment in Bhuvan
Mohan Patnaik (6) and Prabhakar Pandurang Sangzgiri (7) have
been relied upon to show that prisoners who are under a
sentence of death and detenus are entitled to certain
fundamental rights.
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In Piare Dusadh, (8) the Federal Court was considering
appeals against the judgments of the High Courts of
Allahabad, Madras, Nagpur and Patna, under the special
Criminal Courts Ordinance II of 1942. In Case Nos. XLI and
XLII, the High Court of Patna had
588
confirmed the sentence of death passed on the appellants by
the Special Judge. It was urged before the Federal Court
that the death sentence imposed in those cases should be
reduced to transportation for life on account of the time
that had elapsed since the sentences were first pronounced.
The Court observed:
"It is true that death sentences were imposed in these
cases several months ago, that the appellants have been
lying ever since under threat of execution, and that
the long delay has been caused very largely by the time
taken in proceedings over legal points in respect of
the constitution of the courts before which they were
tried and of the validity of the sentences themselves.
We do not doubt that this court has power, where there
has been inordinate delay in executing death sentence
in cases which come before it, to allow the appeal in
so far as the death sentence is concerned and
substitute a sentence of transportation for life on
account of the time factor alone, however right the
death sentence was at the time when it was originally
imposed. But this is a jurisdiction which very closely
entrenches on the powers and duties of the executive in
regard to sentences imposed by courts. It is a
jurisdiction which any court should be slow to
exercise. We do not propose ourselves to exercise it in
these cases. Except in Case No. XLVII (in which we are
commuting the sentence largely for other reasons as
hereafter appears), the circumstances of the crimes
were such that if the death sentence which was the only
sentence that could have been properly imposed
originally, is to be commuted, we feel that it is for
the executive to do so."
It was urged before the Federal Court that in England,
when cases in which death sentence has been imposed are
allowed to be taken to the House of Lords on account of some
important legal point, the consequential delay in finally
disposing of the case was treated as a ground for the
commutation of the death sentence and that a similar course
might well be adopted in India in cases in which substantial
questions of law as to the interpretation of the
Constitution Act had to be considered by the Federal Court.
This argument was rejected on the ground that these were
matters primarily for the consideration of the executive.
589
In Case No. XLVII, which was one of the cases before
the Federal Court, the appellant was convicted by a special
Judge of the offence of murder and was sentenced to death on
September 30, 1942. The Allahabad High Court confirmed the
sentence of death but the Federal Court commuted that
sentence to transportation of life. As is evident from the
parenthetical portion of the passage extracted above, this
was done "largely for other reasons", that is to say, for
reasons other than that a long delay had intervened after
the death sentence was imposed. The Federal Court commuted
the death sentence on the ground that the sentence of
transportation for life was more appropriate in the
circumstances of the case. They added that the appellant was
awaiting the execution of his death sentence for over a
year.
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It is thus clear that Piare Dusadh is not an authority
for the proposition that if a certain number of years have
passed since the imposition of a death sentence, that
sentence must necessarily be commuted to life imprisonment.
In Ediga Anamma(1) this Court was hearing an appeal
against the sentence of death imposed upon the appellant.
Finding that the appellant was a young woman of 24 who was
flogged out of her husband’s house by the father-in-law,
this Court reduced her sentence to life imprisonment for a
variety of factual reasons peculiar to the case, like her
entanglement into a sex net, that she had a young boy to
look after and so on. Speaking for the Court, Krishna Iyer,
J. added:
"What may perhaps be an extrinsic factor but recognised
by the Court as of humane significance in the
sentencing context is the brooding horror of ’hanging’
which has been haunting the prisoner in her condemned
cell for over two years. The Sessions Judge pronounced
the death penalty on December 31, 1971, and we are now
in February 1974. This prolonged agony has ameliorative
impact according to the rulings of this Court."
Piare Dusadh was regarded by the Court as a leading
case on this point. We have already adverted to the
circumstances in which the death sentence was commuted to
transportation for life in that case.
590
In the other cases referred to in Vatheeswaran, (supra)
this Court was hearing appeals against the judgments of High
Courts confirming the sentence of death. In those cases, the
sentence of death was commuted into life imprisonment by
this Court by reason of the long interval which had elapsed
either since the imposition of the death sentence or since
the date of the occurrence.
But we must hasten to add that this Court has not taken
the narrow view that the jurisdiction to interfere with a
death sentence can be exercised only in an appeal against
the judgment of conviction and sentence. The question which
arises in such appeals is whether the extreme penalty
provided by law is called for in the circumstances of the
case. The question which arises in proceedings such as those
before us is whether, even if the death sentence was the
only appropriate sentence to impose in the case and was
therefore imposed, it will be harsh and unjust to execute
that sentence by reason of supervening events. In very
recent times, the sentence of death has been commuted to
life imprisonment by this Court in quite a few cases for the
reason, inter alia, that the prisoner was under the spectre
of the sentence of death for an unduly long time after the
final confirmation of that sentence, consequent upon the
dismissal of the prisoner’s Special Leave Petition or Appeal
by this Court. Traditionally, subsequent events are taken
into account in the area of civil law. There is no reason
why they should not receive due consideration in other
jurisdictions, particularly when their relevance on the
implementation or execution of judicial verdicts is
undeniable. Undoubtedly, principles analogous to Res-
judicata govern all judicial proceedings but when new
situations emerge, particularly factual, after a verdict has
assumed finality in the course of the hierarchical process,
advertence to those situations is not barred on the ground
that a final decision has been rendered already. That final
decision is not a decision on new facts. Courts are never
powerless to do justice, that is to say, to ensure that the
processes of law do not result in undue misery, suffering or
hardship. That is why, even after the final seal of approval
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is placed upon a sentence of death, this Court has
exercised its power to direct, ex debito justiciae, that
though the sentence was justified when passed, its
execution, in the circumstances of the case, is not
justified by reason of the unduly long time which has
elapsed since the confirmation of that sentence by this
Court. Some of us dealing with this case have been parties
to decisions directing, in appropriate cases, that the death
sentence shall not be executed by reason of supervening
circumstances.
591
In Vatheeswaran, the prisoner was under the sentence of
death for over eight years and was in the jail for two years
before that. After the death sentence was pronounced upon
him, he was kept in solitary confinement, contrary to this
Court’s ruling in Sunil Batra. These supervening
considerations, inter alia, were unquestionably germane to
the decision whether the death sentence should be allowed to
be executed. The Court took them into account and commuted
the sentence to life imprisonment.
Like our learned Brethren, we too consider that the
view expressed in this behalf by Lord Scarman and Lord
Brightman in the Privy Council decision of Neol Riley (1)
is, with respect, correct. The majority in that case did not
pronounce upon this matter. The minority expressed the
opinion that the jurisprudence of the civilized world has
recognized and acknowledged that prolonged delay in
executing a sentence of death can make the punishment when
it comes inhuman and degrading: Sentence of death is one
thing; sentence of death followed by lengthy imprisonment
prior to execution is another. The prolonged anguish of
alternating hope and despair, the agony of uncertainty, the
consequences of such suffering on the mental, emotional, and
physical integrity and health of the individual can render
the decision to execute the sentence of death an inhuman and
degrading punishment in circumstances of a given case.
Death sentence is constitutionally valid and
permissible within the constraints of the rule in Bachan
Singh. This has to be accepted as the law of the land. We do
not, all of us, share the views of every one of us. And that
is natural because, every one of us has his own philosophy
of law and life, moulded and conditioned by his own
assessment of the performance and potentials of law and the
garnered experiences of life. But the decisions rendered by
this Court after a full debate have to be accepted without
mental reservations until they are set aside.
The fact that it is permissible to impose the death
sentence in appropriate cases does not, however, lead to the
conclusion that the sentence must be executed in every case
in which it is upheld, regardless of the events which have
happened since the imposition or the upholding of that
sentence. The inordinate delay in the execution of the
sentence is one circumstance which has to be taken into
account
592
while deciding whether the death sentence ought to be
allowed to be executed in a given case. In his sociological
study called ’Condemned to Die, Life Under Sentence of
Death’, Robert Johnson says:
"Death row is barren and uninviting. The death row
inmate must contend with a segregated environment
marked by immobility, reduced stimulation, and the
prospect of harassment by staff. There is also the risk
that visits from loved ones will become increasingly
rare, for the man who is "civilly dead" is often
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abandoned by the living. The condemned prisoner’s
ordeal is usually a lonely one and must be met largely
through his own resources. The uncertainties of his
case-pending appeals, unanswered bids for commutation,
possible changes in the law-may aggravate adjustment
problems. A continuing and pressing concern is whether
one will join the substantial minority who obtain a
reprieve or will be counted among the to-be-dead.
Uncertainty may make the dilemma of the death row
inmate more complicated than simply choosing between
maintaining hope or surrendering to despair. The
condemned can afford neither alternative, but must
nurture both a desire to live and an acceptance of
imminent death. As revealed in the suffering of
terminally ill patients, this is an extremely difficult
task, one in which resources afforded by family or
those within the institutional context may prove
critical to the person’s adjustment. The death row
inmate must achieve equilibrium with few coping
supports. In the process, he must somehow maintain his
dignity and integrity" (page 4)
"Death row is a prison within a prison, physically
and socially isolated from the prison community and the
outside world. Condemned prisoners live twenty-three
and one-half hours alone in their cells..." (page 47)
The author proceeds to say:
"Some death row inmates, attuned to the bitter
irony of their predicament, characterize their
existence as a living death and themselves as the
living dead. They are speaking symbolically, of course,
but their imagery is an appropriate description of the
human experience in a world where life is so obviously
ruled by death. It takes
593
into account the condemned prisoners’ massive
deprivation of personal autonomy and command over
resources critical to psychological survival; tomblike
setting, marked by indifference to basic human needs
and desires; and their enforced isolation from the
living, with the resulting emotional emptiness and
death." (page 110)
A prisoner who has experienced living death for years
on end is therefore entitled to invoke the jurisdiction of
this Court for examining the question whether, after all the
agony and torment he has been subjected to, it is just and
fair to allow the sentence of death to be executed. That is
the true implication of Article 21 of the Constitution and
to that extent, we express our broad and respectful
agreement with our learned Brethren in their visualisation
of the meaning of that article. The horizons of Article 21
are ever widening and the final word on its conspectus shall
never have been said. So long as life lasts, so long shall
it be the duty and endeavour of this Court to give to the
provisions of our Constitution a meaning which will prevent
human suffering and degradation. Therefore, Article 21 is as
much relevant at the stage of execution of the death
sentence as it is in the interregnum between the imposition
of that sentence and its execution. The essence of the
matter is that all procedure, no matter what the stage, must
be fair, just and reasonable. It is well-established that a
prisoner cannot be tortured or subjected to unfair or
inhuman treatment. (See Prabhakar Pandurang Sangzgiri,
Bhuvan Mohan Patnaik and Sunil Batra). It is a logical
extension of the self-same principle that the death
sentence, even if justifiably imposed, cannot be executed if
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supervening events make its execution harsh, unjust or
unfair, Article 21 stands like a sentinel over human misery,
degradation and oppression. Its voice is the voice of
justice and fairplay. That voice can never be silenced on
the ground that the time to heed to its imperatives is long
since past in the story of a trial. It reverberates through
all stages-the trial, the sentence, the incarceration and
finally, the execution of the sentence.
In cases too numerous to mention, this Court has
released undertrial prisoners who were held in jail for
periods longer than the period to which they could be
sentenced, if found guilty: this jurisdiction relates to
pre-trial procedure. In Hussainara Khatoon (supra) and
Champalal(1), speedy trial was held to be an integral part
of the
594
right conferred by Article 21: this jurisdiction relates to
procedure during the trial. In Prabhakar Pandurang
Sangzgiri, the Court upheld the right of a detenu, while in
detention, to publish a book of scientific interest called
’Inside the Atom’; in Bhuvan Mohan Patnaik, it was held that
prisoners had to be afforded reasonable human conveniences
and that the live-wire mechanism fixed on prison-walls in
pursuance of administrative instructions could not be
justified as reasonable if it violated the fundamental
rights of the prisoners; in Sunil Batra, solitary
confinement and bar-fetters were disapproved as normal modes
of securing prisoners. These three cases are illustrative of
the Court’s jurisdiction to review prison regulations and to
regulate the treatment of prisoners while in jail. And, last
but not the least, as we have stated already, death
sentences have been commuted to life imprisonment by this
Court either while disposing of Special Leave Petitions and
Appeals or while dealing with Writ Petitions filed after the
unsuccessful termination of the normal processes of
litigation: this jurisdiction relates to the execution of
the sentence. This then is the vast sweep of Article 21.
What we have said above delineates the broad area of
agreement between ourselves and our learned Brethren who
decided Vatheeswaran. We must now indicate with precision
the narrow area wherein we feel constrained to differ from
them and the reasons why. Prolonged delay in the execution
of a death sentence is unquestionably an important
consideration for determining whether the sentence should be
allowed to be executed. But, according to us, no hard and
fast rule can be laid down as our learned Brethren have done
that "delay exceeding two years in the execution of a
sentence of death should be considered sufficient to entitle
the person under sentence of death to invoke Article 21 and
demand the quashing of the sentence of death". This period
of two years purports to have been fixed in Vatheeswaran
after making "all reasonable allowance for the time
necessary for appeal and consideration of reprieve". With
great respect, we find it impossible to agree with this part
of the judgment. One has only to turn to the statistics of
the disposal of cases in High Court and the Supreme Court to
appreciate that a period far exceeding two years is
generally taken by those Courts together for the disposal of
matters involving even the death sentence. Very often, four
or five years elapse between the imposition of death
sentence by the Sessions Court and the disposal of the
Special Leave Petition or an Appeal by the Supreme Court in
that matter. This is apart from the time which the President
or the Governor, as the case may be, takes to consider
petitions filed
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under Article 72 or Art. 161 of the Constitution or the time
which the Government takes to dispose of applications filed
under sections 432 and 433 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure. It has been the sad experience of this Court that
no priority whatsoever is given by the Government of India
to the disposal of petitions filed to the President under
Article 72 of the Constitution. Frequent reminders are
issued by this Court for an expeditious disposal of such
petitions but even then the petitions remain undisposed of
for a long time. Seeing that the petition for reprieve or
commutation is not being attended to and no reason is
forthcoming as to why the delay is caused, this Court is
driven to commute the death sentence into life imprisonment
out of a sheer sense of helplessness and frustration.
Therefore, with respect, the fixation of the time limit of
two years does not seem to us to accord with the common
experience of the time normally consumed by the litigative
process and the proceedings before the executive.
Apart from the fact that the rule of two years runs in
the teeth of common experience as regards the time generally
occupied by proceedings in the High Court, the Supreme Court
and before the executive authorities, we are of the opinion
that no absolute or unqualified rule can be laid down that
in every case in which there is a long delay in the
execution of a death sentence, the sentence must be
substituted by the sentence of life imprisonment. There are
several other factors which must be taken into account while
considering the question as to whether the death sentence
should be vacated. A convict is undoubtedly entitled to
pursue all remedies lawfully open to him to get rid of the
sentence of death imposed upon him and indeed, there is no
one, be he blind, lame, starving or suffering from a
terminal illness, who does not want to live. The Vinoba
Bhaves, who undertake the "Prayopaveshana" do not belong to
the world of ordinary mortals. Therefore, it is
understandable that a convict sentenced to death will take
recourse to every remedy which is available to him under the
law, to ask for the commutation of his sentence, even after
the death sentence is finally confirmed by this Court by
dismissing his Special Leave Petition or Appeal. But, it is,
at least relevant to consider whether the delay in the
execution of the death sentence is attributable to the fact
that he has resorted to a series of untenable proceedings
which have the effect of defeating the ends of justice. It
is not uncommon that a series of review petitions and writ
petitions are filed in this Court to challenge judgments and
orders which have assumed finality, without any seeming
justification. Stay orders are obtained in those proceedings
and then, at the end
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of it all, comes the argument that there has been prolonged
delay in implementing the judgment or order. We believe that
the Court called upon to vacate a death sentence on the
ground of delay caused in executing that sentence must find
why the delay was caused and who is responsible for it. If
this is not done, the law laid down by this Court will
become an object of ridicule by permitting a person to
defeat it by resorting to frivolous proceedings in order to
delay its implementation And then, the rule of two years
will become a handy tool for defeating justice. The death
sentence should not, as far as possible, be imposed. But, in
that rare and exceptional class of cases wherein that
sentence is upheld by this Court, the judgment or order of
this Court ought not to be allowed to be defeated by
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applying any rule of thumb.
Finally, and that is no less important, the nature of
the offence, the diverse circumstances attendant upon it,
its impact upon the contemporary society and the question
whether the motivation and pattern of the crime are such as
are likely to lead to its repetition, if the death sentence
is vacated, are matters which must enter into the verdict as
to whether the sentence should be vacated for the reason
that its execution is delayed. The substitution of the death
sentence by a sentence of life imprisonment cannot follow by
the application of the two years’ formula as a matter of
"quod erat demonstrandum".
In the case before us, the sentence of death was
imposed upon the petitioners by the learned Sessions Judge,
Sangrur, on November 26, 1977. It was upheld by the High
Court on July 18, 1978. This Court dismissed the Special
Leave Petition filed by the petitioners on March 5, 1979.
The matter is pending in this Court since then in one form
or another, by reason of some proceeding or the other. The
last of the writ Petitions filed by the petitioners was
dismissed by this Court on August 24, 1981. We do not know
why the sentence imposed upon the petitioners has not been
executed for more than a year and half. The Government of
Punjab must explain that delay. We are of the opinion that,
in the instant case, the sentence of death imposed upon the
petitioners by the Sessions Court and which was upheld by
the High Court, and this Court, cannot be vacated merely for
the reason that there has been a long delay in the execution
of that sentence.
On the date when these Writ Petitions came before us,
we asked the learned counsel for the petitioners to argue
upon the
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reasons why, apart from the dealy caused in executing the
death sentence, it would be unjust and unfair to execute
that sentence at this point of time. Every case has to be
decided upon its own facts and we propose to decide this
case on its facts. After hearing the petitioners’ counsel,
we will consider the question whether the interests of
justice require that the death sentence imposed upon the
petitioners should not be executed and whether, in the
circumstances of the case, it would be unjust and unfair to
execute that sentence now
We must take this opportunity to impress upon the
Government of India and the State Governments that petitions
filed under Articles 72 and 161 of the Constitution or under
sections 432 and 433 of the Criminal Procedure Code must be
disposed of expeditiously. A self-imposed rule should be
followed by the executive authorities rigorously, that every
such petition shall be disposed of within a period of three
months from the date on which it is received. Long and
interminable delays in the disposal of these petitions are a
serious hurdle in the dispensation of justice and indeed,
such delays tend to shake the confidence of the people in
the very system of justice. Several instances can be cited,
to which the record of this Court will bear testimony in
which petitions are pending before the State Governments and
the Government of India for an inexplicably long period. The
latest instance is to be found in Cri. Writ Petition
Nos.345-348 of 1983, from which it would appear that
petitions filed under Art. 161 of the Constitution are
pending before the Governor of Jammu & Kashmir for anything
between 5 to 8 years. A pernicious impression seems to be
growing that whatever the courts may decide, one can always
turn to the executive for defeating the verdict of the Court
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by resorting to delaying tactics. Undoubtedly, the executive
has the power, in appropriate cases, to act under the
aforesaid provisions but, if we may remind, all exercise of
power is preconditioned by the duty to be fair and quick.
Delay defeats justice.
On the question as to whether the death sentence should
not be allowed to be executed in this case, we shall
pronounce later after hearing the parties. In the meanwhile,
notice will go to the Government of Punjab.
Order accordingly.
H.L.C.
598