Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 45
PETITIONER:
DEENA @ DEENA DAYAL ETC. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT23/09/1983
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
PATHAK, R.S.
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
CITATION:
1983 AIR 1155 1984 SCR (1) 1
1983 SCC (4) 645 1983 SCALE (2)340
CITATOR INFO :
F 1992 SC 395 (7)
ACT:
Code of Criminal, Procedure, 1973-S. 354(5)-Execution
of death sentence-Hanging by rope-Whether violative of Art
21 ?
Constitution of India, 1950-Art. 21-Execution of
sentences lawfully imposed-Mandate of Art. 21 is that
sentence shall not be executed in a cruel, barbarous or
degrading manner.
Constitution of India, 1950-Art. 21-Burden of proof-If
it appears that a person is being deprived of his life or
personal liberty, the burden is on the State to establish
the constitutional validity of impugned law.
Judicial Review-To pronounce upon constitutionality of
law is not legislating even if such pronouncement involves
value judgment.
HEADNOTE:
The petitioners who had been sentenced to death for the
offence of murder were awaiting execution of the sentence.
Their plea was that hanging by rope is a cruel and barbarous
method of executing of the sentence and s. 354(5) Cr. P.C.
which prescribes that method is violative of Art. 21 of the
Constitution The respondents raised a preliminary objection
that the question had already been concluded by the decision
in Bachan Singh v. State of Punjab, [1983]1 S.C.R. 145. The
objection was overruled.
Counsel for petitioners contended that s. 354(5), Cr.
P.C. is bad because it is impermissible to take human life
even under the decree of a court since it is human to take
life under any circumstances; that by reason of the
provision contained in Art. 21, it is impermissible to cause
pain or suffering of any kind whatsoever in the execution of
any sentence, much more so while executing a death sentence;
that the method of hanging prescribed by s. 354(5) for
executing the death sentence is barbarous, inhuman and
degrading; that it is the constitutional obligation of the
State to provide for a humane and dignified method for
executing the death sentence, which does not involve torture
of any kind; and that if the method prescribed by s. 354(5)
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 45
does not meet this requirement, no death sentence can be
executed since no other method for executing that sentenced
is prescribed by or is permissible under the law. Counsel
also referred to the judgment in Machhi Singh v. State of
Punjab, [1983] 3 S.C.C. 470 and suggested that it virtually
overrules Bachan Singh.
2
Counsel for respondents contended that a sentence
lawfully imposed by a court can and has to be executed,
though by causing the least pain and suffering and by
avoiding torture or degradation of any kind; that the method
prescribed by s. 354(5), Cr. P.C. for executing the death
sentence is a humane and dignified method involving the
least amount of pain and cruelty; that no other method of
executing the death sentence is quicker or less painful; and
that Art. 21 does not postulate that no pain or suffering
whatsoever shall be caused in the execution of a sentence
lawfully imposed by a court, including the sentence of
death. Counsel further submitted that unless on the face of
it, the method prescribed by for executing law a sentence is
revolting to conscience, courts must surrender their
discretion to legislative judgment when the challenge to the
constitutionality of the law is based on considerations
which the court is not equipped to evaluate by manageable
judicial standards, and contended that the court’s
evaluation of the method of hanging prescribed by law shall
have to be inevitably subjective, almost to the point of
being legislative in character, which must be avoided at all
costs.
Dismissing the petitions,
HELD: 1. The method prescribed by s. 354(5), Cr. P.C.
for executing the death sentence does not violate the
provision contained in Art. 21 of the Constitution. [59 E]
(a) The material placed before the Court shows that
hanging by rope is not a cruel mode of executing the death
sentence: the system consists of a mechanism which is easy
to assemble; preliminaries to the act are quick and simple
and are free from anything that would unnecessarily sharpen
the poignancy of the prisoner’s apprehension; the chances of
accident during the course of hanging can safely be
excluded; the method is quick and certain and eliminates the
possibility of a lingering death; unconsciousness supervenes
almost instantaneously after the process is set in motion
and death follows as a result of dislocation of the cervical
vertebrae. The system of hanging, as now used, avoids to the
full extent the chances of strangulation which results on
account of too short a drop or of decapitation which results
on account of too long a drop. The mechanics of the method
of hanging have undergone significant improvement over the
years and hanging has been almost perfected into a science.
The system is consistent with the obligation of the State to
ensure that the process of execution is conducted with
decency and decorum without involving degradation or
brutality of any kind. At the moment of final impact when
life becomes extinct, some physical pain would be implicit
in the very process of the ebbing out of life. But, the act
of hanging causes the least pain imaginable on account of
the fact that death supervenes instantaneously. The
conclusion that the system of hanging is as painless as is
possible in the circumstances, that it causes no greater
pain than any other known method of executing the death
sentence and that it involves no barbarity, torture or
degradation is based on reason, supported by expert evidence
and the findings of modern medicine. [58 C-H, 59 A]
Report of the Royal Commission on Capital Punishment
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 45
(U.K.), September, 1953; 35th Report of the Law Commission
of India on Capital Punishment,
3
September 30,1967; George R. Scott: Hanging Through the Ages
(Torchstream Books, London); J W. Cecil Turner (Ed.) Kenny’s
Outlines of Criminal Law, 19th Ed., 1966; Harry Elmer Barnes
and Negley K. Teeters: New Horizons in Criminology, 3rd Ed.,
1966; U.N. Department of Economic and Social Affairs:
Capital Punishment, (New York, 1962); and Bachan Singh,
[1983] 1 S.C.R. 145 referred to.
(b) On the question of pain involved in a punishment,
the concern of law has to be to ensure that the various
steps which are attendant upon or incidental to the
execution of any sentence, more so the death sentence, do
not constitute punishments by themselves. Humaneness is the
hall-mark of civilized laws. If a prisoner is sentenced to
death, it is lawful to execute that punishment and that
only. He cannot be subjected to barbarity, humiliation,
torture or degradation before the execution of that
sentence, not even as necessary steps in the execution of
that sentence. The process of hanging does not involve any
of these directly, indirectly or incidentally.[59 B-D]
(c) Hanging by rope was the only method of executing
the death sentence which was known to the Constituent
Assembly and yet it did not express any disapproval of that
method, though it touched upon the question of death
sentence while dealing with the President’s power of pardon
under Art. 72(1)(c) of the Constitution. [58 B]
(d) The system of hanging by rope is in operation in
large parts of the civilized world and there is a
responsible body of scientific and legal opinion which holds
that hanging by rope is not a cruel mode of executing the
death sentence. [57 H, 58 A]
(e) Hanging as a mode of execution is not relentless in
its severity. Judges ought not to assume that they are
endowed with a divine insight into the needs of a society;
they should heed the warning that, as history amply proves,
the judiciary is prone to misconceive the public good by
confounding private notions with constitutional
requirements. [62 G-H, 63 A]
(f) The Court is not required to determine the merits
and demerits of the alternative methods of execution which
are in vogue elsewhere because the Court cannot substitute
any other method of execution for the method prescribed by
law. However, an understanding of the process involved in
the competing methods used for executing the death sentence
is not altogether pointless because if some other method has
a real and definite advantage over a the method of hanging,
arbitrary rejection of that method by the state may not
answer the constitutional prescription. However, neither
electrocution, nor lethal gas, nor shooting, nor even the
lethal injection has any distinct or demonstrable advantage
over the system of hanging. The general belief that death by
electrocution is entirely painless is not free from doubt.
That apart, failure of electrical energy. supplied by
commercial undertakings has been considered in America as an
impediment in the use of the electric chair. With frequent
failures of electric power in our country, the electric
chair will become an instrument of torture. Lethal injection
is by and large an untried
4
method. The injection is required to be administered
intravenously which is a delicate and skilled operation. The
Royal Commission on Capital Punishment (U.K.) was not
satisfied that executions carried out by the administration
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 45
of lethal injections would bring about death more quickly,
painlessly and decently in all cases. Shooting by a firing
squad, apart from being unreliable, is an uncivilised method
of extinguishing life. It is the favourite pastime of
military regimes which trample upon human rights with
impunity. It is most recklessly and wantonly used for
liquidating opposition and smothering dissent in countries
which do not respect the rule of law. Murders by shooting
are becoming a serious menace to law and order in our
country. Shooting by the State in order to kill for
executing the order of a court will unwittingly confer
respectability on the ’shooting to kill’ tactics which are
alarmingly growing in proportion, The suggestion that a
death convict may be put to sleep by a sleep-inducing
injection before applying other methods such as
electrocution or gas chamber, is not only impracticable but
would appear to involve complications and torture to an
uncommon degree. [50 F-H, 57 E, 53 F, 54 B, 56 C, F, 55 G-H,
56 A-B, 56 G, 57 A]
(g) Matters of policy are certainly for the legislature
to consider and therefore, by what mode or method the death
sentence should be executed, is for the legislature to
decide. But the function of the legislature ends with
providing what it considers to be the best method of
executing the death sentence. Where the function of the
legislature ends, the function of the judiciary begins. It
is for the courts to decide upon the constitutionality of
the method prescribed by the legislature for implementing or
executing a sentence. Whether that method conforms to the
directs of the constitution is a matter not only subject to
judicial review but it constitutes a legitimate part of the
judicial function. The question whether the particular
method prescribed by law for executing the death sentence is
in consonance with the Constitution inevitably involves a
value judgment based upon a comparative evaluation of
alternate methods for executing the death sentence. But more
than any such comparative evaluation, the court’s plain and
primary duty is to examine whether, even if the method
selected by the legislature is the least objectionable, it
is still open to the objection that it involves under
torture, degradation or cruelty. The Court’s task will end
with pointing out why, if at all, the method at present
provided by law is contrary to the mandate of the
constitution. To pronounce upon the constitutionality of the
law is not legislating, even if such pronouncement involves
the consideration of the evolving standards of the society.
[35 A-C; E-F]
2. (a) The contention that it is inhuman to kill under
any circumstances and that Art. 21 imposes a total
prohibition on the taking of human life has to be rejected.
If the argument were to be accepted, the imposition of death
sentence would become an exercise in futility. Indeed, if
carried to its logical conclusion, the argument will make it
impossible to execute any sentence whatsoever, particularly
of imprisonment because of every sentence of imprisonment
necessarily involves pain and suffering to a lesser or
greater degree. A constitution so carefully conceived as
ours cannot be construed to produce such a startling result.
Painless punishment is a contradiction in
5
terms. If it is lawful to impose the sentence of death in
appropriate cases, it would be lawful to execute that
sentence in an appropriate manner. The mandate of Art. 21 is
not that the death sentence shall not be executed but that
it shall not, be executed in a cruel, barbarous or degrading
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 45
manner. When the sentence of death is constitutionally
valid, not even the sophisticated sensitivities can justly
demand that those upon whom, the extreme penalty of law is
imposed because of the magnitude of their crime should not
be made to suffer the execution of that sentence,
unaccompanied by torture or degradation of any kind. If the
larger interests of the community as opposed to the
interests of an individual require that a death sentence
should be imposed in an exceptional class of cases, the same
societal interests would justify the execution of that
sentence, though in strict conformity with the requirements
of Art. 21. [59 G, 60 C-D, 59 H, 60B F-G]
(b) The argument that either death sentence is
barbarous or that the method of hanging is cruel, inhuman or
degrading cannot draw any sustenance from the Eighth
Amendment Clause of the U.S. Constitution. The American
Supreme Court has formulated a sophisticated definition of
that clause which has a dynamic content. Several concurring
opinions show that, in America, capital punishment is not
considered to be violative of the Eighth Amendment. What the
Eighth Amendment prohibits is "something inhuman and
barbarous and something more than the mere extinguishment of
life". The suffering necessarily involved in the execution
of death sentence is not banned by the Eighth Amendment
though the cruel form of execution is. [62 F-G, 61 F, 62 D-
E]
Kemmler, 136 U.S. 436; O’ Neil v. Vermont, 144 U,S.
323; Trop v. Dulles, 356 U.S. 86; and Louisiana v. Resweber,
329 U.S. 459; referred to.
3. (a) There has to be finality to litigation, criminal
as well as civil, if law is not to lose its credibility. No
one of course can question that law is a dynamic science,
the social utility of which consists in its ability to keep
abreast of the emerging trends in social and scientific
advance and its willingness to readjust its postulates in
order to accommodate those trends. But, that is not to say
that judgments rendered by this Court after a full debate
should be reconsidered every now and then and their
authority doubted or diluted. That would be doing disservice
to law since certainty over a reasonably foreseeable period
is the hall-mark of law. [11 F-G]
The question that, in the circumstances mentioned in
Bachan Singh, it is permissible to impose the sentence of
death for the offence of murder must be treated as concluded
and not any longer open to argument. In Machhi Singh, the
learned Judges have but formulated broad guidelines to
assist the Courts in deciding the vexed question as to
whether the death sentence is at all called for. Evidently,
the judgment does not enlarge the scope of the rule in
Bachan Singh by broadening the narrow field of cases which
call for the death sentence. The constraints of Bachan Singh
deserve to be preserved but that means that it is only a
rare degree of malevolence which invites and justifies the
imposition of death sentence. [11 B-D]
6
Bachan Singh v. State of Punjab [1983] 1 S.C.R. 145;
and Machhi Singh v. State of Punjab,[1983]; 3 S.C.C. 470
referred to.
(b) Both the majority and the minority in Bachan Singh
considered the question of the validity of the death
sentence from the procedural aspect also, with special
reference to the method of hanging prescribed by law for
executing the death sentence. Nevertheless, the question
whether the particular mode of executing the death sentence
prescribed by sec. 354(5) Cr. P.C., violates the provisions
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 45
of Art. 21 of the Constitution was not directly and
substantially in issue in Bachan Singh and it was not
considered specifically by the majority as an independent
issue. It would not be proper to sidetrack that the question
and refuse to examine it fully because of the incidental
consideration which it received in Bachan Singh.[14 D, H, 15
C-D]
(c) The retribution involved in the theory ’tooth for
tooth’ and ’an eye for eye’ has no place in the scheme of
civilized jurisprudence and the court cannot turn a deaf ear
to the petitioners’ claim for justice on the ground that the
enormity of their crimes has resulted in grave injustice to
the victims of those crimes. The court is concerned to
ensure due compliance with constitutional mandates, no
matter the occasion. Justice has to be done dispassionately
in accordance with the constitutional attitudes whether it
is a murdered or a smuggler who asks for it. Law cannot
demand its pound of flesh.[16 E-G]
Per Chandrachud, C.J. and Pathak, J. (Sabyasachi
Mukharji,J. reserving his opinion on the point)
In cases arising under Art. 21 of the Constitution, if
it appears that a person is being deprived of his life or
has been deprived of his personal liberty, the burden rests
on the State to establish the constitutional validity of the
impugned law. [32 F]
There is a fundamental distinction between cases
arising under Art. 14 and those which arise under Arts. 19
and 21. In the generality of cases under Art. 14, the
challenge is based on the allegation that the impugned
provision is discriminatory since it singles out the
petitioner for hostile treatment from amongst persons who,
being situated similarly, belong to the same class as the
petitioner and the petitioner has to plead and prove that
there are others who are situated similarly as him and that
he is singled out and subjected to unfavourable treatment.
Whether there are other persons who are situated similarly
as the petitioner and whether he is subjected to hostile
discrimination are questions of fact and the burden to
establish the existence of these facts rests on the
petitioner. In a challenge based on the violation of Art. 19
or Art. 21 the petitioner has undoubtedly to plead that, for
example, his right to free speech and expression is violated
or that he is deprived of his right to life or personal
liberty. But once he shows that, which really is not a part
of the burden of proof, it is for the State to justify the
impugned law or action by proving that, for example, the
deprivation of the petitioner’s right to free speech and
expression is saved by cl. (2) of Art. 19 since it is in the
7
nature of a reasonable restriction on that right in the
interests of matters mentioned in cl. (2), or that, the
petitioner has been deprived of his life or personal liberty
according to a just, fair and reasonable procedure
established, by law. In cases arising under Art. 19, the
burden is never on the petitioner to prove that the
restriction is not reasonable or that the restriction is not
in the interests of matters mentioned in cl. (2). Likewise,
in cases arising under Art. 21, the burden is never on the
petitioner to prove that the procedure prescribed by law
which deprives him of his life or personal liberty is
unjust, unfair or unreasonable. As soon as it is shown that
the Act invades a right guaranteed by Art. 21 it is
necessary to inquire whether the State has proved that the
person has been deprived of his life or personal liberty
according to procedure established by law, that is to say by
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 45
a procedure which is first, fair and reasonable. [23 D-H]
Any case, even a locus classicus is an authority for
what it decides. It is permissible to extend the ratio of a
decision to cases involving identical situations; factual
and legal, but care must be taken to see that this is not
done mechanically, that is without a close examination of
the rational of the decision which is cited as a precedent.
Human mind, trained even in the strict discipline of law, is
not averse to taking the easy course of relying on decisions
which have become famous and applying their ratio to
supposedly identical situations.[21 G-H]
Saghir Ahmed v. State of U.P., [1955] 1 S.C.R. 707,
Khyerbari Tea Co. v. State of Assam, [1964] 5 S.C.R. 975;
Western U.P. Electric Power & Supply Co. Ltd. v. State of
U.P., [1969] 3 S.C.R. 865; Mohd. Faruk v. State of M.P.,
[1970] 1 S.C.R. 156; Laxmi Khandsari v. State of U.P.,
[1981] 3 S.C.R. 92; and Bachan Singh v. State of Punjab,
[1983] 1 S.C.R. 145; referred to.
Ram Krishna Dalmia v. Justice S.R. Tendolkar, [1959]
S.C.R. 279; Mohd, Hamif Quareshi v. State of Bihar; [1959]
S.C.R. 629; Madhu Limaye v. Sub-Divisional Magistrate,
[1971] 2 S.C.R. 711; and Pathumma v. State of Kerala, [1978]
2 S.C.R. 547; explained and distinguished.
B Baneriji v. Anita Pan, [1975] 2 S.C.R. 774; decided
per incurium.
In the instant case the impugned statute, on the face
of it, provides for a procedure for extinguishing life.
Therefore, not even the initial obligation to show the fact
of deprivation of life or liberty rests on the petitioners.
The State must establish that the procedure prescribed by s.
354(5), Cr. P. C. for executing the death sentence is just,
fair and reasonable. [33 A-B]
Per Sabyasachi Mukharji, J.
As soon as it is shown that a Statute or Act in
question invades a right guaranteed by Art. 21, it is
necessary to enquire whether the State has proved that the
prisoner has been deprived of his life or personal liberty
according to procedure established by law. However, at
present I would not express my
8
opinion whether in all such cases, the State has a further
initial burden to prove that procedure established by law is
just, fair and reasonable. [63 E-L]
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petitions Nos. 503,516,
532, 534, 535, 537, 538 -39, 541-45, 543-45, 553,554, 555,
565, 574, 586, 556-57, 592-94, 604-06, 676, 600, 533, 1414
and 1423 of 1983.
(Under article 32 of the Constitution of India)
WITH
Special Leave Petition (Criminal) No. 196 of 1983
From the Judgment and Order dated the 6th December,
1982 of the Allahabad High Court in Criminal Appeal No.
1357/82.
AND
Writ Petition Nos. 286, 345-48, 428, 429 of 1983.
(Under article 32 of the constitution of India)
Advocates For The Petitioners
N.M. Ghatate and Mr. S.V. Deshpande-in WP. 503.
R.C. Kohli, A.C.-in WPs. 516 and 586.
R.K. Garg, R. Sathish and V.K. Pandita,-in WPs. 534 and
565.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 45
A.N. Bardaiyar and B.B. Sinha-in WP. 535.
A.K. Srivastava, A.C.-in WP. 537.
O.P. Verma-in WPs. 538-539.
Mrs. K.Hingarani-in WPs. 541-42.
B.S. Varshney and C.L. Sahu-in WPs. 543-45.
L.K. Gupta-in WP. 553.
Raju Ramachandran-in WP.555.
9
Miss Kailash Mehta and Mrs. Naresh Bakshi- in WPs. 5652
600.
Arun Madan, A.C. - in WPs. 556-557.
V.D. Khanna - in WPs. 604-06.
S.N. Mehta, A.C. - in WP.676.
Anil Kumar Gupta and Brij Bhushan-in WP. 533.
D.K. Garg - in WP. 1414, 1697-98 and 286.
Aruneshwar Gupta in-WP. 1423.
S.K.Mehta, P.N. Puri and M.K. Dua-in S.L.P. No. 196/83.
Solmon Khurshid and L.R. Singh-in WPs. 345-48.
Miss Lalita Kohli, A.C.-in WP. 429.
Petitioner in Person-in WP. 532.
Nemo in WPs. WPs. 534,574,529-94 and 428.
Advocates For the Respondents:
K.Parasaran Soliciter General, for State of Maharashtra
and U.O.I.
K.G. Bhagat Additional Soliciter General,
N.C. Talukdar, Anil Dev Singh, C.V. Subba Rao and Miss
A. Subhashini
M.N. Shorff for State of Maharashtra.
A.V. Rangam for State of Tamil Nadu.
Swaraj Kaushal for State of Karnatka.
Harbans Singh and D.D. Sharma for State of Punjab.
R.N. Poddar for State of Haryana.
Dalveer Bhandari for State of U.P.
B.B. Singh for State of Bihar.
10
Ram Jethmalani for State of Karnatka and for interveners.
Miss Rani Jethmalani and Shrikant Bhat, in WP. Nos.
532, 534 and 535 of 1983.
Chandrakant Lecturer in the Department of Forensic
Medicine, All India Institute of Medical Sciences,
intervenor-in person in WP. No. 503.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
CHANDARCHUD, C.J.: In this batch of Writ Petitions, the
petitioners were sentenced to death for the offence of
murder under section 302 of the Penal Code. They have
nothing in common except that they committed murders and
have been sentenced to death. The sentence of death imposed
upon them has become final in the sense that the Special
Leave Petitions, Appeals, Review Petitions and Mercy
Petitions filed by them have been dismissed, some of these
more than once. The main question which has been raised by
the petitioners in these writ petitions relates to the
validity of the mode of execution of the death sentence.
Section 354(5) of the Code of Criminal Procedure
provides that:
When any person is sentenced to death, the
sentence shall direct that he be hanged by the neck
till he is dead
The petitioners challenge the constitutional validity of
this provision on the ground that hanging a convict by rope
is a cruel and barbarous method of executing a death
sentence, which is violative of Article 21 of the
Constitution That article provides that:
No person shall be deprived of his life or
personal liberty except according to procedure
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 45
established by law.
The validity of death sentence which Section 302
prescribes for the offence of murder was upheld by this
Court in Bachan Singh.
11
The ratio of that decision is that the normal sentence for
murder is life imprisonment and that the sentence of death
can be imposed in a very exceptional class of cases,
described in that judgment as the ’rarest of rare cases’.
Which kind of cases would precisely fall within that
category is in the very nature of things difficult to define
and even to describe. But, all the same, a studied attempt
was made by this Court in Machhi Singh to identify, though
not to crystalize, the area of those rarest of rare cases in
which death sentence can justifiably be imposed. Shri Garg’s
criticism of that judgment that it virtually overrules
Bachan Singh and Jagmohan Singh is wide off the mark. In
Machhi Singh, the learned Judges have but formulated broad
guidelines to assist the Courts in deciding the vexed
question as to whether the death sentence is at all called
for. Evidently, the judgment does not enlarge the scope of
the rule in Bachan Singh by broadening the narrow field of
cases which call for the death sentence.
But, Machhi Singh is by the way. The validity of the
death sentence for the offence of murder having been upheld
by this Court after a careful and prolonged discussion,
there is no justification for reopening that question,
though such a suggestion was made half-heartedly before us,
towards the conclusion of the arguments. The question that,
in the circumstances mentioned in Bachan Singh, it is
permissible to impose the sentence of death must be treated
as concluded and not any longer open to argument. There has
to be finality to litigation, criminal as much as civil, if
law is not to lose its credibility. No one of course can
question that law is a dynamic science, the social utility
of which consists in its ability to keep abreast of the
emerging trends in social and scientific advance and its
willingness to readjust its postulates in order to
accommodate those trends. Life is not static. The purpose of
law is to serve the needs of life. Therefore law cannot be
static. But, that is not to say that Judgments rendered by
this Court after a full debate should be reconsidered every
now and then their authority doubted or diluted. That would
be doing disservice to law since certainty over a reasonably
foreseeable period is the hallmark of law.
The learned Solicitor General has raised a preliminary
objection to these Writ Petitions on the ground that the
question
12
which is sought to be argued by the petitioners is concluded
by the judgment rendered by a Constitution Bench of this
Court in Bachan Singh. It is urged that since the question
is not res integra, it is not open to the petitioners to
raise it, nor indeed any reason or justification for this
Court to entertain it. Learned counsel for the petitioners,
led by Shri R.K. Garg, answer this objection by contending
that the only question which arose in Bachan Singh was
whether it is constitutionally permissible to prescribe the
sentence of death. It is urged on behalf of the petitioners
that the question as regards the validity of section 354(5)
of the Code of Criminal Procedure was neither argued in
Bachan Singh nor considered by the Court.
The objection taken by the learned Solicitor General is
not without substance but for reasons which we will
presently indicate, we do not propose to accept it. At page
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 45
196 of the Report in Bachan Singh,(1) the main arguments of
the ’Abolitionists’ which were, "substantially adopted" by
counsel for the petitioners therein are reproduced in
clauses (a) (b) and (c). Under Clause (c), the argument is
reproduced thus: "Execution by whatever means and for
whatever offence is cruel, inhuman and degrading
punishment", by which is obviously meant ’execution of death
sentence’. The argument mentioned in clause (a) to the
effect that the death penalty is unconstitutional because it
is irreversible is considered at pages 196 and 197 of the
Report. The argument mentioned in clause (b) as to whether
death penalty serves any penological purpose at all is
considered at page 197. Though the arguments mentioned in
clauses (a) and (b) at page 196 of the Report have been
specifically considered under separate heads as stated
above, the argument mentioned in clause (c) at page 196
relating to the execution of death sentence has not been
considered under a separate head. The discussion of the,
argument whether death penalty, serves any penological
purpose, is concluded at the end of the third line on page
222. The heading "Regarding (c)" should have appeared in the
Report after the said third line and before the fresh
paragraph which beings thus: "We will now consider the issue
whether the impugned limb of the provision in section 302,
Penal Code, contravenes Article 21 of the Constitution".
That this should have been so is clear from the fact that
after considering the particular argument at pages 222 and
223, Justice Sarkaria who spoke for the majority concludes:
13
"Under the successive Criminal Procedure Code
which have been in force for about 100 years, a
sentence of death is to be carried out by hanging. In
view of the aforesaid constitutional postulates, by no
stretch of imagination can it be said that the death
penalty under Section 302, Penal Code, either per se or
because of its execution by hanging, constitutes an
unreasonable, cruel or unusual punishment. By reason of
the same constitutional postulates, it cannot be said
that the framers of the Constitution considered death
sentence for murder or the prescribed traditional mode
of its execution as a degrading punishment which would
defile "the dignity of the individual" within the
contemplation of the Preamble to the Constitution".
Bhagwati, J., who dissented from the majority
considered the question of the constitutional validity of
the death sentence, both from the substantive and the
procedural points of view. At page 286, the learned Judge
says that "the worst time for most of the condemned
prisoners would be the last few hours when all certainty is
gone and the moment of death is known". After extracting
quotation from Dostoyevsky and Canns which bear upon the
execution of death sentence, the learned Judge observes:
"There can be no stronger words to describe the utter
depravity and inhumanity of death sentence". After making
this observation Bhagwati, J., proceeds thus:
"The physical pain and suffering which the
execution of the sentence of death involves is also no
less cruel and inhuman. In India, the method of
execution followed is hanging by the rope.
Electrocution or application of lethal gas has not yet
taken its place as in some of the western countries. It
is therefore with reference to execution by hanging
that I must consider whether the sentence of death is
barbaric and inhuman as entailing physical pain and
agony. It is no doubt true that the Royal Commission on
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 45
Capital Punishment 1949-53 found that hanging is the
most humane method of execution and so also in Ichikawa
v. Japan, the Japanese Supreme Court held that
execution by hanging does not correspond to cruel
punishment’ inhibited by Article 36 of the Japanese
Constitution. But whether amongst all the
14
methods of execution, hanging is the most humane or in
view of the Japanese Supreme Court, hanging is not
cruel punishment within the meaning of Article 36, one
thing is clear that hanging is undoubtedly accompanied
by intense physical torture and pain." (emphasis ours).
Thereafter, the learned Judge refers to the description of
the method of hanging given by warden Duffy of San Quentin,
a high security prison in America and the description given
in 1927 by a surgeon who witnesses a double execution and
records his conclusion by saying that the passages extracted
by him established beyond doubt that "the execution of
sentence of death by hanging does involve intense physical
pain and suffering, through it may be regarded by some as
more humane than electrocution or application of lethal
gas."
This discussion will show that both the majority and
the minority in Bachan Singh considered the question of the
validity of the death sentence from the procedural aspect
also, with special reference to the method of hanging
prescribed by law for executing the death sentence. While
upholding the validity of death sentence, the majority did
not overlook and, in fact, took into consideration the
circumstance that the mode prescribed by the Criminal
Procedure Code for executing the death sentence is hanging.
On the other hand, while striking down the validity of death
sentence Bhagwati, J., was influenced by the consideration
that the mode of hanging prescribed by law for executing the
death sentences was itself cruel and barbarous.
Though this is the true position, the reason why we are
not inclined to uphold the preliminary objection taken by
the learned Solicitor-General is that the question as
regards the constitutional validity of section 354 (5) of
the Code of Criminal Procedure was neither raised squarely
by the petitioners in Bachan Singh nor considered directly
by the Court. If we may so put it, the question as regards
the validity of section 354 (2) of the Code was not directly
and substantially in issue in Bachan Singh. The questions
which arose for consideration in that case are formulated in
the majority judgment at page 169 as Questions I and II. The
majority referred to the mode of execution of the death
sentence only incidentally. The question whether the
particular mode of executing the death sentence prescribed
by section 354 (5) of the Code violates the provisions of
Article 21 was not considered specifi-
15
cally by the majority as in independent issue. Considering
the judgment of Bhagwati, J., also as a whole it would
appear that the principal reason for which the learned Judge
struck down the death sentence is its irrevocability, its
arbitrariness and its lack of purpose. One of us was a party
to the decision in Bachan Singh and if recollections do not
fail so soon and are permissible aids to the understanding
of a decision it would not be right to say that the question
as regards the constitutional validity of section 354 (5) of
the Code was either directly put in issue in that case or
was argued upon or was considered by the Court as an
independent reason bearing upon the validity of the death
sentence. The question which the petitioners have raised in
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 12 of 45
these writ petitions is important not only from the legal
and constitutional point of view but also from the
sociological point of view. It will not be proper to side-
track that question and refuse to examine it fully because
of the incidental consideration which it received in Bachan
Singh. Accordingly, we reject the preliminary objection
raised by the learned Solicitor General and proceed to
examine the question raised by the petitioners on its own
merits, on the basis that the question is still open to
argument.
The petitioners, who have been sentenced to death for
acts of outrageous brutality, have presented their case with
an air of injured innocence. Their claim is that no matter
what pain and suffering they may have inflicted upon their
victims and their families, no pain or suffering whatsoever
shall be caused to them while executing the death sentence.
It is urged on their behalf by Shri R.K. Garg and the other
learned counsel that even if it may be lawful to impose the
death sentence in an exceptional class of cases, it is
impermissible to execute that sentence even in those cases,
since it is inhuman and cruel to take human life under any
circumstances, even under a decree of a Court. That is the
fundamental premise of the petitioners’ contention. Secondly
it is urged that the method prescribed by section 354(5) of
the Code for executing the death sentence is inhuman,
barbarous and degrading and therefore that method cannot be
employed for executing the death sentence. It is the
constitutional obligation of the State to provide for a
humane and dignified mode of executing the death sentence,
which will not involve torture or cruelty of any kind. It is
urged that if the State fails to discharge that obligation,
no death sentence can be executed, howsoever justifiably it
may have been imposed. The Code of Criminal Procedure
prescribes only one method of executing the
16
death sentence, namely, by hanging and if that method
violates the mandate of Article 21, the sentence must remain
unexecuted, since the Court cannot substitute any other
method of execution for the only method prescribed and
envisaged by law. Finally, it is argued that the burden is
on the State to prove that the method of execution of the
death sentence prescribed by section 354(5) of the Code is a
humane and civilized method and that it does not involve
pain, cruelty or degradation of any kind. This is so
because, the burden to establish that any particular act,
challenged as unconstitutional, is just and fair always lies
on the State. Therefore, it is not for the petitioners to
show that any other method of executing the death sentence
would be less painful, cruel or degrading. According to the
petitioners, the State must fail if it does not discharge
the burden which lies heavily upon it. The petitions cannot
be dismissed on the ground that the petitioners have failed
to establish that the method prescribed by section 354(5)
involves unnecessary pain, torture or cruelty; or that other
methods of executing the death sentence are either not cruel
or painful or are less cruel and painful than the method
prescribed by section 354(5) of the Code. These arguments
require careful consideration, uninfluenced by the
circumstance that the demand for civilized, humane and
painless treatment is made by those who have been found
guilty of subjecting their victims to uncivilized and
inhuman acts involving great torture and suffering. The
retribution involved in the theory "Tooth for tooth’ and ’an
eye for eye’ has no place in the scheme of civilized
jurisprudence and we cannot turn a deaf ear to the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 13 of 45
petitioners’ claim for justice on the ground that the
enormity of their crimes has resulted in grave injustice to
the victims of these crime. We are concerned to ensure due
compliance with constitutional mandates, no matter the
occasion. If it were not so, smugglers who are detained
under the laws of detention shall have to be denied the
protection of Article 22 of the Constitution on the ground
that they are guilty of acts which sabotage the economy of
the country. Justice has to be done dispassionately in
accordance with the constitutional attitudes whether it is a
murderer or a smuggler who asks for it. Law cannot demand
its pound of flesh.
At one stage we were inclined to decide the main
question argued by the petitioners without considering the
rival contentions as to the burden of proof. We thought that
whether the burden lies on the petitioners to show that the
method prescribed by section 354(5) of the Code is
constitutionally impermissible or whether the
17
burden lies on the State to prove that the particular method
is permissible within the frame work of the Constitution, we
should pronounce upon the legality of that method on the
basis of the data which has been placed before us by the
both sides. The question of burden of proof ceases to have
the same importance when the entire evidence is before the
Court, each side having placed before it such material as it
considers necessary to support its case. But then, the fact
that parties have produced their respective data before the
Court does not absolve the Court from considering the
question whether, on the basis of the entire material before
it, the burden can be said to have been discharged by the
party on whom it lies. Besides, counsel engaged themselves
into quite some argument over the question of burden of
proof and since that question is of importance and arises
frequently, it is just as well that we decide it. We propose
to decide that question before adverting to the other
contentions raised on behalf of the petitioners.
It is urged by Shri Jethmalani who appears on behalf of
the Government of Karnataka, as also on behalf of the Bar
Council of India who were allowed to intervene in these
proceedings, that every statute carries with it a strong
presumption of constitutionality and a heavy burden lies
upon those who challenge that statute to displace that
presumption. In support of this submission, the learned
counsel relies principally on the decision of a seven-Judge
Bench of this Court in Madhu Limaye v. Sub-Divisional
Magistrate, Monghyr, which, he says, was not noticed in
Bachan Singh. The learned Attorney-General (the Solicitor-
General became the Attorney-General during the hearing of
these petitions) also argued that the decisions of this
Court have almost uniformly taken the view that the burden
to displace the presumption of constitutionality lies on the
person who challenges the statute as unconstitutional.
Most of the important decisions which have a bearing on
the question of burden of proof have been noticed in the
majority and minority judgments in Bachan Singh. Sarkaria J,
speaking for the majority, has summed up the position thus:
"With regard to onus, no hard and fast rule of
universal application in all situations, can be deduced
from the decided cases. In some decisions such as
18
Saghir Ahmed v. State of Uttar Pradesh and Khyerbari
Tea Co. v. State of Assam & Ors it was laid down by
this Court that if the writ petitioner succeeds in
showing that the impugned law ex facie abridges or
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 14 of 45
transgresses the rights coming under any of the sub-
clause of clause (1) of Article 19, the onus shifts on
the respondent State to show that the legislation comes
within the permissible limits imposed by any of the
clauses (2) to (6) as may be applicable to the case,
and, also to place material before the court in support
of that contention. If the State does nothing in that
respect, it is not for the petitioner to prove
negatively that it is not covered by any of the
permissive clauses.
"A contrary trend, however, is discernible in the
recent decisions of this Court, which start with the
initial presumption in favour of the constitutionality
of the statute and throw the burden of rebutting that
presumption on the party who challenges its
constitutionality on the ground of Art 19."
As an instance of the contrary trend, Sarkaria, J., has
cited the judgment of Krishna Iyer, J., in B. Banerji v.
Anita Pan, which reiterates the ratio in Ram Krishna Dalmia
to the following effect:
".... there is always a presumption in favour of
the constitutionality of an enactment and the burden is
upon him who attacks it to show that there has been a
clear transgression of the constitutional principles";
and
"....... that it must be presumed that the
legislature understands and correctly appreciates the
need of its own people, that its laws are directed to
problems made manifest by experience and that its
discriminations are based on adequate grounds."
19
Referring to the judgment of this Court in R.M.D.
Chamarbaugwala and to the first proposition in Chapter III
of Seervai’s Constitutional Law (Page 54 2nd Edition; page
118, 3rd Edition) Krishna Iyer. J. observed:
"We have to remember the comity of the
constitutional instrumentalities and raise the
presumption that the legislature understands and
appreciates the needs of the people and is largely
aware of the frontiers of and limitations upon its
power. Some Courts have gone to the extent of holding
that there is a presumption in favour of
constitutionality, and a law will not be declared
unconstitutional unless the case is so clear as to be
free from doubt; and to doubt the constitutionality of
a law is to resolve it in favour of its validity."
Sarkaria, J., has finally referred to the Seven-Judge
Bench decision of this Court in Pathumma v. State of Kerala,
in while Fazal Ali, J., speaking for himself, Beg, C.J.,
Krishna Iyer and Jaswant Singh. JJ., declared the law in the
following terms:
"It is obvious that the Legislature is in the best
position to understand and appreciate the needs of the
people as enjoined by the Constitution to bring about
social reforms for the upliftment of the backward and
the weaker sections of the society and for the
improvement of the lot of poor people. The Court will,
therefore, interfere in this process only when the
statute is clearly violative of the right conferred on
the citizen under Part III of the Constitution or when
the Act is beyond the legislative competence of the
legislature or such other grounds. It is for this
reason that the Courts have recognised that there is
always a presumption in favour of the constitutionality
of a statute and the onus to prove its invalidity lies
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 15 of 45
on the party which assails the same. In the case of
Mohd. Hanif Quareshi v. The State of Bihar, while
adverting to this aspect Das, C J.
20
as he then was, speaking for the Court observed as
follows:
"The pronouncements of this Court further
establish, amongst other things, that there is
always a presumption in favour of the
constitutionality of an enactment and that the
burden is upon him, who attacks it, to show that
there has been a clear violation of the
constitutional principles. The Courts, it is
accepted, must presume that the Legislature
understands and correctly appreciates the needs of
its own people, that its laws are directed to
problems made manifest by experience and that its
discriminations are based on adequate grounds."
As we have said at the outset, these decisions have
been discussed in the majority and minority judgments in
Bachan Singh.
The decision of a Bench of seven Judges on which Shri
Jethmalani has placed strong reliance is the one reported in
Madhu Limaye. The question which arose for consideration in
that case was whether the provisions of section 144 and
Chapter VIII of the Code of Criminal Procedure could be said
to be in the interests of public order in so far as the
right of freedom of speech and expression, the right of
assembly, and the right to form associations and unions are
concerned and in the interests of the general public in so
far as they curtailed the freedom of movement throughout the
territory of India. The petitioners and the interveners
therein invoked the American doctrine of preferred-position
for the fundamental rights, particularly the right to
freedom of speech and expression. Hidayatullah, C.J., who
spoke for six learned Judges (Bhargava. J. dissenting on
another point) reviewed the preferred position doctrine and
concluded that it did not any longer have the support of the
Supreme Court of the United States and therefore. in
America, "unreasonableness of the law has to be
established", The learned Chief Justice proceeded to say:
"In this Court the preferred-position doctrine has
never found ground although vague expressions such as
’the most cherished rights’, ’the inviolable freedoms’,
sometimes occur. But this is not to say that any one
Fundamental Right is superior to the other or that
21
Article 19 contains a hierarchy. Pre-constitution laws
are not to be regarded as unconstitutional. We do not
start with the presumption that, being a pre-
constitution law, the burden is upon the State to
establish its validity. All existing laws are continued
till this Court declares them to be in conflict with a
fundamental right and, therefore, void. The burden must
be placed on those who contend that a particular law
has become void after the coming into force of the
Constitution by reason of Article 13(1) read with any
of the guaranteed freedoms."
These decisions on the question of burden of proof must
be divided into two categories: those which deal with the
violation of the equality clause in Article 14 of the
Constitution and those others with deal with the violation
of the guarantees contained in Article 19. The leading
decision on the former category of cases is Ram Krishna
Dalmia in which Das, C.J., formulated six principles as
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 16 of 45
emerging out of an analysis of the cases under Article 14.
The passage at page 297 of the Report in which these
principles are set out has become a classic and a part of it
has already appeared in this judgment as a quotation
extracted by Krishna Iyer, J., in B. Banerji v. Anita Pan.
It may bear repetition to say that according to the learned
Chief Justice, "there is always a presumption in favour of
the constitutionality of an enactment and the burden is upon
him who attacks it to show that there has been a clear
transgression of the constitutional principles" and that,
"it must be presumed that the legislature understands and
correctly appreciates the need of its own people, that its
laws are directed to problems made manifest by experience
and that its discriminations are based on adequate grounds."
The concluding words of the second of these two principles
show that the said principle is limited in its application
to cases arising under Article 14. The question of
discrimination arises under Article 14 and not under Article
19 of the Constitution. Any case, even a locus classicus, is
an authority for what it decides. It is permissible to
extend the ratio of a decision to cases involving identical
situations, factual and legal, but care must be taken to see
that this is not done mechanically, that is, without a close
examination of the rationale of the decision which is cited
as a precedent Human mind, trained even in the strict
discipline of law, is not averse to taking the easy course
of relying on decisions which have become famous and
applying their ratio to supposedly identical situations. In
Ram Krishna Dalmia, the
22
Court was dealing with a challenge to section 3 of the
Commissions of Inquiry Act, 1952 and the notification issued
by the Central Government under that section appointing a
Commission of Inquiry to inquire into and report on the
affairs of certain companies. The Act was challenged on the
ground that it conferred an arbitrary power on the
Government to issue notifications appointing Commissions of
Inquiry, while the notification was challenged on the ground
that the petitioners and their companies were arbitrarily
singled out for the purpose of hostile and discriminatory
treatment and subjected to a harassing and oppressive
inquiry. The principles enunciated by the learned Chief
Justice on behalf of the Court have to be understood in the
context of these facts, the context being that the case
before the Court involved considerations limited and germane
to the application of Article 14. Apart from certain other
questions which are not relevant for our purpose, the entire
discussion of the facts and law in that judgment revolves
round the provisions of the Article. Indeed, Article 14 is
the king-pin of the decision in Ram Krishna Dalmia. It is
wrong to treat the principles enunciated by the learned
Chief Justice as of universal application and, in that
process, to apply them to cases arising under other articles
of the Constitution, particularly Articles 19 and 21.
The principle which underlies Article 14 is that equals
must be treated equally, that is to say, that "laws must
operate equally on all persons under like circumstances".
Article 14, though apparently absolute in its terms, permits
the State to pass a law which makes a classification, so
long as the classification is based on intelligible
differentia having a real nexus with the object which is
sought to be achieved by the law. In the generality of cases
under Article 14, the challenge is based on the allegation
that the impugned provision is discriminatory since it
singles out the petitioner for hostile treatment, from
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 17 of 45
amongst persons who, being situated similarly, belong to the
same class as the petitioner. It is plain that in matters of
this nature, the petitioner has to plead and prove that
there are others who are situated similarly as him and that
he is singled out and subjected to unfavourable treatment.
As observed by Shah J. in Western U.P. Electric Power and
Supply Co. Ltd. v. State of U.P.:
"Article 14 of the Constitution ensures equality
among equals: its aim is to protect persons similarly
23
placed against discriminatory treatment. It does not
however operate against rational classification. A
person setting up a grievance of denial of equal
treatment by law must establish that between persons
similarly circumstanced, some were treated to their
prejudice and the differential treatment had no
reasonable relation to the object sought to be achieved
by the law."
Whether there are other persons who are situated similarly
as the petitioner is a question of fact. And whether the
petitioner is subjected to hostile discrimination is also a
question of fact. That is why the burden to establish the
existence of these facts rests on the petitioner. To cast
the burden of proof in such cases on the State is really to
ask it to prove the negative that no other persons are
situated similarly as the petitioner and that, the treatment
meted out to the petitioner is not hostile.
Thus, there is a fundamental distinction between cases
arising under Article 14 and those which arise under
Articles 19 and 21 of the Constitution. In a challenge based
on the violation of Articles 19 and 21, the petitioner has
undoubtedly to plead that, for example, his right to free
speech and expression is violated or that he is deprived of
his right to life and personal liberty. But once he shows
that, which really is not a part of the "burden of proof",
it is for the State to justify the impugned law or action by
proving that, for example, the deprivation of the
petitioner’s right to free speech and expression is saved by
clause (2) of Article 19 since it is in the nature of a
reasonable restriction on that right in the interests of
matters mentioned in clause (2), or that, the petitioner has
been deprived of his life or personal liberty according to a
just, fair and reasonable procedure established by law. In
cases, arising under Article 19, the burden is never on the
petitioner to prove that the restriction is not reasonable
or that the restriction is not in the interests of matters
mentioned in clause (2). Likewise, in cases arising under
Article 21, the burden is never on the petitioner to prove
that the procedure prescribed by law which deprives him of
his life or personal liberty is unjust, unfair or
unreasonable. That is why the ratio of cases which fall
under the category of the decision in Ram Krishna Dalmia
must be restricted to those arising under Article 14 and
cannot be extended to cases arising under Article 19 or
Article 21 of the Constitution.
24
Saghir Ahmed v. The State of U.P. is a typical instance
of a case arising under Article 19 of the Constitution. The
U.P. Road Transport Act, 1951 which was passed prior to the
First Amendment Amendment to the Constitution which
introduced clause (6) in Article 19, was challenged in that
case on the ground that it conflicted with the fundamental
right of the petitioner guaranteed under Article 19 (1) (g)
of the Constitution. Dealing with the question of burden of
proof Mukherjea, J., who spoke for the Constitution Bench,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 18 of 45
stated the position thus:
"With regard to the second point also we do not
think that the learned Judges have approached the
question from the proper stand point. There is
undoubtedly a presumption in favour of the
constitutionality of a legislation. But when the
enactment on the face of it is found to violate a
fundamental right guaranteed under Article 19 (1) (g)
of the Constitution, it must be held to be invalid
unless those who support the legislation can bring it
within the purview of the exception laid down in clause
(6) of the article. If the respondents do not place any
material before the Court to establish that the
legislation comes within the permissible limits of
clause (6), it is surely not for the appellants to
prove negatively that the legislation was not
reasonable and was not conducive to the welfare of the
community." (Page 726)
When the enactment on the face of it is violation of a
fundamental right guaranteed by Article 19, the petitioner
is absolved even of that modicum of an obligation to show
that a right guaranteed to him by Article 19 is violated.
When the face of the law is not so clear, the petitioner
does have to discharge the obligation of proving the fact of
deprivation. But, that only and nothing more.
A similar question arose in Khyerbari Tea Co. Ltd. v.
The State of Assam, where the Assam Taxation (on Goods
carried by road or on Inland Waterways) Act, 1961 was
challenged on the ground that it placed unreasonable
restrictions on the freedom of trade guaranteed by Article
301 and infringed the provision of Article 19 (1) (g) of the
Constitution. The Act was upheld by a Constitution Bench of
this Court by a majority of 4 to 1,
25
Gajendragadkar J., who spoke for the majority, relied on the
decision in Saghir Ahmed and said:
"It is true that on several occasions, this Court
has generally observed that a presumption of
constitutionality arises where a statute is impeached
as being unconstitutional, but as has been held in the
case of Saghir Ahmed in regard to the fundamental right
under Article 19 (1) (g), as soon as the invasion of
the right is proved, it is for the State to prove its
case that the impugned legislation falls within clause
(6) of Article 19. The position may be different when
we are dealing with Article 14, because under that
Article the initial presumption of constitutionality
may have a larger sway inasmuch as is may place the
burden on the petitioner to show that the impugned law
denied equality before the law, or equal protection of
the laws. We may in this connection refer to the
observations made by this Court in the case of Hamdard
Dawakhana v. Union of India. Another principle which
has to be borne in mind in examining the
constitutionality of a statute, it was observed, is
that it must be assumed that the legislature
understands and appreciates the needs of the people and
the laws it enacts are directed to problems which are
made manifest by experience and that the elected
representatives assembled in a legislature enact laws
which they consider to be reasonable for the purpose
for which they are enacted. Presumption is, therefore,
in favour of the constitutionality of an enactment. It
is significant that all the decisions to which
reference is made in support of this statement of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 19 of 45
law are decisions under Article 14 of the Constitution.
Mr. Setalvad has fairly conceded that in view of the
decision of this Court in the case of Saghir Ahmed, it
would not be open to him to contend that even after the
invasion of the fundamental right of a citizen is
proved under Article 19 (1) (g), the onus would not
shift to the State. In our opinion, the said decision
is a clear authority for the proposition that once the
invasion of the fundamental right under Article 19 (1)
is proved, the State must justify its case under clause
26
(6) which is in the nature of an exception to the main
provisions contained in Article 19 (1). The position
with regard to the onus would be the same in dealing
with the law passed under Art. 304(b). In fact, in the
case of such a law, the position is some what stronger
in favour of the citizen, because the very fact that a
law is passed under Article 304(b) means clearly that
it purports to restrict the freedom of trade. That
being so, we think that as soon as it is shown that the
Act invades the right of freedom of trade, it is
necessary to enquire whether the State has proved that
the restrictions imposed by way of taxation are
reasonable and in the public interest within the
meaning of Article 304(b). This enquiry would be of a
similar character in regard to clause (6) of Article
19". (pp 1003-4). (emphasis supplied).
The observations made by Gajendragadkar J, in regard to
the position arising under Article 304(b) are apposite to
cases under article 21. Article 304(b) provides that,
notwithstanding anything in article 301 or article 303, the
Legislature of a State may by law "impose such reasonable
restrictions on the freedom of trade, commerce or
intercourse with or within that State as may be required in
the public interest". According to the learned Judge, in the
case of a law passed under Article 304(b) the position on
the question of burden of proof is somewhat stronger in
favour of the citizen, because the very fact that the law is
passed under that Article means clearly that it purports to
restrict the freedom of trade. By analogy, the position is
also somewhat stronger in favour of the petitioners in cases
arising under Article 21, because the very fact that, in
defence, a law is relied upon as prescribing a procedure for
depriving a person of his life or personal liberty means
clearly that the law purports to deprive him of these
rights. Therefore, as soon as it is shown that the Act
invades a right guaranteed by Article 21, it is necessary to
enquire whether the State has proved that the person has
been deprived of his life or personal liberty according to
procedure established by law, that is to say, by a procedure
which is just, fair and reasonable.
Another decision in the same category of cases is Mohd.
Faruk v. State of Madhya Pradesh, in which the State
Government
27
issued a notification cancelling the confirmation of the
Municipal bye-laws in so far as they related to the
permission to the slaughtering of bulls and bullocks.
Dealing with the challenge of the petitioner to the
notification on the ground that it infringed his fundamental
right under Article 19(1)(g) of the Constitution Shah, J.,
who spoke for the Constitution Bench, observed:
"When the validity of a law placing restriction
upon the exercise of fundamental rights in Art. 19(1)
is challenged, the onus of proving to the satisfaction
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 20 of 45
of the Court that the restriction is reasonable lies
upon the State......Imposition of restriction on the
exercise of a fundamental right may be in the form of
control or prohibition, but when the exercise of a
fundamental right is prohibited, the burden of proving
that a total ban on the exercise of the right alone may
ensure the maintenance of the general public interest
lies heavily upon the State." (pp. 160-161)
When, in a matter arising under Article 21, the person
aggrieved is found to have been totally deprived of his
personal liberty or is being deprived of his right to life,
burden of proving that the procedure established by law for
such deprivation is just, fair and reasonable lies heavily
upon the State.
This discussion will be incomplete without a close
examination of the decisions of this Court in B. Banerjee v.
Anita Pan and Pathumma v. State of Kerala, which have been
referred to by Sarkaria, J., in Bachan Singh as evidencing a
"contrary trend" according to which, even in regard to cases
under Article 19, there is an initial presumption in favour
of the constitutionality of the statute and the burden of
rebutting that presumption lies on the person who asserts
that the statute is unconstitutional. In B. Banerjee, a
three-Judge Bench of this Court had to consider the question
whether sub-section (3A) which was introduced in section 13
of the West Bengal Premises Tenancy Act, 1956 was violative
of Article 19(1)(f) of the Constitution. By the newly
introduced subsection, the transferee of a property cannot
file an eviction suit against his tenant for a period of
three years from the date of transfer, on the grounds
mentioned in clauses (f) and (ff) of section 13(1) of the
Act. We have already extracted the relevant passage from the
judgment of Krishna Iyer, J., who spoke for the Court in
28
that case. The learned Judge said that presumption had to be
raised that the legislature understands and appreciates the
needs of the people and that some courts had gone to the
extent of holding that because of the presumption of
constitutionality which every statute carries with it, the
law will not be declared unconstitutional unless the case is
so clear as to be free from doubt. The learned Judge added,
citing Seervai, that "to doubt the constitutionality of a
law is to resolve it in favour of its validity". With great
respect, the judgment in B. Banerjee overlooks the binding
decisions in Saghir Ahmed, Khyerbari Tea Co. and Mohd. Faruk
which are directly in point. Not only are binding decisions
not referred to in the judgment but, in support of the view
propounded by the Court, Krishna Iyer, J., has cited the
decision in Ram Krishna Dalmia which, as we have stated
earlier, must be limited in its application to cases arising
under Article 14 of the Constitution. To apply mechanically
the decisions under Article 14 to cases arising under
Article 19 is to ignore the significant distinction between
the nature of the rights conferred by the two articles and
their purport and content. B. Banerjee cannot therefore be
regarded as an authority for the proposition contended for
by the learned Attorney-General. Evidently, the landlord’s
contention that a beneficent provision, aimed at the
protection of tenants harassed by motivated transfers of
properties, was unconstitutional evoked a stern response.
That is understandable. But, in the process of highlighting
the need for social welfare legislation in the area of
landlord-tenant relationship, the distinction between
Article 14 and Article 19 in so far as it bears upon the
question of burden of proof failed to receive any attention.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 21 of 45
The Bar too would seem not to have drawn the attention of
the Court to that distinction and to the judgments which we
have discussed a little earlier.
Pathumma is a seven-Judge Bench decision on the
question whether the restrictions imposed by the Kerala
Agriculturists (Debt Relief) Act, 1970 violate Article
19(1)(f) and Article 14. The appellants therein challenged
section 20 of the Act particularly, which entitles
agricultural debtors to recover properties sold in execution
of decrees passed against them, Fazal Ali, J., who spoke
four out of the seven learned Judges, refers at the outset
of the judgment to the "approach which a Court has to make
and the principles by which it has to be guided in such
matters". After stating that the Courts must interpret the
Constitution:
29
"against the social setting of the country so as
to show a complete consciousness and deep awareness of
the growing requirements of the society, the increasing
needs of the nation, the burning problems of the day
and the complex issues facing the people which the
legislature in its wisdom, through beneficial
legislation, seeks to solve".
the learned Judge observes that since that the legislature
is in the best position to understand and appreciate the
needs of the people, the Courts have recognised that there
is "always" a presumption in favour of constitutionality of
a statute and the onus to prove its invalidity lies on the
party which assails the same. In support of this
proposition, the learned Judge relied upon the decision of
this Court in Mohd. Hanif Quareshi v. The State of Bihar, in
which Das, C.J., restated the two propositions which were
enunciated in Ram Krishna Dalmia.
We find it difficult to read the observations made by
Fazal Ali, J. on behalf of the four learned Judges as an
authority on the question of burden of proof in cases
arising under Article 19 of the Constitution. It is true
that section 20 of the Kerala Act of 1970 was challenged on
the ground that it violates Article 19 (1) (f) but it must
be emphasised that it was also challenged on the ground that
sub-sections (3) and (6) thereof were violative of Article
14. The observations made by the learned Judge and the
statement of law contained in his judgment would certainly
apply to cases arising under Article 14, for reasons which
we have already discussed. It is reasonable to suppose that
if, by the use of the word "always", it was intended to lay
down rules as to burden of proof in regard to cases arising
under Article 19 also, some reference would have been made
by the learned Judge to the Constitution Bench decisions in
Saghir Ahmed, Khyerbari Tea Co. and Mohd. Faruk. The fact
that these decisions have not been referred to supports the
inference that the observations made by the learned Judge
at the outset of the judgment are of a general nature, not
intended to apply to cases arising under Article 19 of the
Constitution. The Court, as we have said, was also dealing
with a challenge under Article 14 and the weighty
observations made by the learned Judge would apply to the
arguments arising under that provision.
In support of the principles set out by him, Fazal Ali,
J., relied upon the decision of a Constitution Bench of this
Court in
30
Mohd, Hanif Quareshi. In that case, laws passed by the
States of Bihar, U.P. and Madhya Pradesh, banning the
slaughter of certain animals were challenged by the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 22 of 45
petitioners on the ground that those laws violated the
fundamental rights guaranteed to them by Articles 14, 19 (1)
and 25 of the Constitution. The Court, speaking through Das,
C.J., first disposed of the preliminary question raised by
Pandit Thakurdas Bhargava that since the impugned Acts were
passed in discharge of the obligation laid on the State by
the Directive Principle contained in Article 48, no
grievance could be made that those laws violated the
fundamental rights conferred on the petitioners by Chapter
III of the Constitution. The Court rejected the preliminary
objection and turned to the second question as to whether
the laws passed by the Legislatures of the three States
violated the provisions of Article 25(1) of the
Constitution. After rejecting that contention also, the
Court took up for consideration the argument of the
petitioners as regards "the denial of the equal protection
of the law" to them. The petitioners’ argument was that the
impugned Acts prejudicially affected only the Muslim Kasais
who kill cattle but not others who kill goats and sheep and
therefore those Acts were violative of Article 14 of the
Constitution. It is while dealing with this contention that
the learned Chief Justice made observations which have been
extracted by Fazal Ali, J. The observations made by the
learned Chief Justice regarding the presumption of
constitutionality and the burden being upon the person who
attacks it are specifically made in the context of Article
14 as in Ram Krishna Dalima. We are therefore of the opinion
that the principles stated by Fazal Ali, J. on the question
of burden of proof in Pathumma may apply to cases arising
under Article 14 but not to those, arising under Articles 19
and 21 of the Constitution. In fact, in Laxmi Khandsari v.
State of U.P., Fazal Ali, J., sitting with Kaushal, J., said
that "It is no doubt well-established" that when a citizen
complains of the violation of a fundamental right conferred
by Article 19, the onus is on the State to prove "by
acceptable evidence, inevitable consequences or sufficient
materials" that the restriction is reasonable.
Bhagwati, J., in his dissenting opinion in Bachan Singh
has expressed the view that the observations made by Krishna
Iyer, J., in B. Banerjee and by Fazal Ali, J., in Pathumma
cannot apply to cases arising under Articles 19 and 21 of
the Constitution. We respectfully agree with that view.
31
The seven-Judge Bench decision in Madhu Limaye, on
which Shri Jethmalani relies, involved a challenge to
section 144 and Chapter VIII of the Code of Criminal
Procedure on the ground that those provisions violated
clauses (a), (b), (c) and (d) of Article 19 of the
Constitution. We have already extracted the passage from the
judgment delivered in that case by Hidayatullah, C.J., on
which the learned counsel relies. That passage shows that
the Court was considering the argument advanced by the
petitioners that the preferred-position doctrine, which was
said to be in vogue in America, was applicable in India. The
argument was that, according to that doctrine, any law
restricting the freedom of speech and expression, religion
or assembly must be taken on its face to be invalid till it
was proved to be valid. Holding that the doctrine did not
have the support of even the American Supreme Court any
longer and that the unreasonableness of the law had to be
established, the learned Chief Justice observed: "We do not
start with the presumption that being a pre-constitution
law, the burden is upon the State to establish its
validity,,. Therefore, according to the learned Chief
Justice, "the burden must be placed on those who contend
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 23 of 45
that the particular law has become void after coming into
force of the Constitution by reason of Article 13(1) read
with any of the guaranteed freedoms". (emphasis supplied in
both the quotations). These observations may at first blush
seem to support Shri Jethmalani’s contention but, as we have
stated earlier, it is wrong to extend the observations made
in one context to an entirely different context. The
question which was considered in Madhu Limaye was whether
certain provisions of the Code of Criminal Procedure, which
is a pre-Constitution law, are violative of the
Constitution. The Contention was that the Code of Criminal
Procedure is a pre-constitution Law and therefore the State
must justify the constitutionality of that law. That
argument was rejected with the observation that "we cannot
start with the presumption that a pre-Constitution law is
unconstitutional therefore the burden lies upon the State to
establish its validity". The specific observation on the
question of burden to the effect that the burden lies on
those who challenge the constitutionality of a law, is also
made expressly in regard to the provisions of Article 13 (1)
of the Constitution which provides that the laws which were
in force before the commencement of the Constitution shall,
in so far as they are inconsistent with the provisions of
Part III, be void to the extent of such inconsistency. Shri
Jethmalani is right that Madhu Limaye was not noticed in
32
Bachan Singh, but we are unable to accept his contention
that the decision is an authority for the proposition that
the same rule of burden of proof must apply to all
constitutional challenges, whether under Article 14, 19 or
21 of the Constitution.
We must hark back to Bachan Singh with which we began
the discussion of the question as regards the burden of
proof. Sarkaria, J. observed in the majority judgement that
"with regard to the onus, no hard and fast rule of universal
application in all situations could be deduced from the
decided cases". We have made a modest attempt to show that
cases arising under Article 14 are covered by a rule as to
burden of proof which is different from the rule which
applies to cases arising under Articles 19 and 21 of the
Constitution. In that sense, it is true to say that there is
no hard and fast rule of universal application which can be
applied a like to all situations. We have also dealt with
the two decisions in B. Banerjee and Pathumma which the
Court had evidently in mind when it spoke of a ’contrary
trend" which was discernible in the later decisions of the
Court. After referring to the Indian and the American cases
bearing on the subject, the majority recorded its conclusion
by saying that "the State has discharged its burden" to
establish that death penalty serves as a deterrent, by
producing the necessary data. We are referring to this
aspect of the decision in Bachan Singh in order to show that
the judgment of the majority proceeded on the basis that the
burden of proving the constitutionality of section 302 was
on the State and the State had successfully discharged that
burden. Thus, Bachan Singh is an authority for proposition
that in cases arising under Article 21 of the Constitution,
if it appears that a person is being deprived of his life or
has been deprived of his personal liberty, the burden rests
on the State to establish the constitutional validity of the
impugned law.
That disposes of the question of burden of proof. In
the light of this discussion, we must proceed to examine the
question whether the State has discharged the burden of
proving that the provisions of section 354(5) of the Code of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 24 of 45
Criminal Procedure are in conformity with the mandate of
Article 21. Consistently with the conclusion which we have
recorded on the question of burden of proof, we must hold
that the burden does not lie on the petitioners to prove
that the procedure prescribed by the aforesaid provision for
taking life is unjust, unfair or unreasonable. The impugned
statue, on the face of it, provides for a procedure for
extinguishing
33
life. Therefore, not even the initial obligation to show the
fact of deprivation of life or liberty rests on the
petitioners. The State must establish that the procedure
prescribed by section 354(5) of the Code for executing the
death sentence is just, fair and reasonable. That burden
includes the obligation to prove that the said procedure is
not harsh, cruel or degrading.
Has the State discharged this heavy onus ? We have
already set out the grounds on which the petitioners
challenge the constitutionality of section 354(5) of the
Code of Criminal Procedure which provides that "When any
person is sentenced to death, the sentence shall direct that
he be hanged by the neck still he is dead". Stated briefly,
the contention of the petitioners is that section 354(5) of
the Code is bad because:
1. It is impermissible to take human life even under
the decree of a Court since it is inhuman to take
life under any circumstances;
2. By reason of the provision contained in Article
21, it is impermissible to cause pain or suffering
of any kind whatsoever in the execution of any
sentence, much more while executing a death
sentence;
3. The method of hanging prescribed by section 354
(5) for executing the death sentence is barbarous,
inhuman and degrading; and
4. It is the constitutional obligation of the State
to provide for humane and dignified method for
executing the death sentence, which does not
involve torture of any kind. If the method
prescribed by section 354(5) does not meet this
requirement, no death sentence can be executed
since, no other method for executing that sentence
is prescribed by or is permissible under the law.
These arguments are answered by the learned Attorney
General by contending that a sentence lawfully imposed by a
Court can and has to be executed, though by causing the
least pain and suffering and by avoiding torture of
degradation of any kind; that the method prescribed by
section 354(5) for executing the death sentence
34
is a humane and dignified method which involves the least
amount of pain and cruelty; that no other method of
executing the death sentence is quicker or less painful;
that Article 21 does not postulate that no pain or suffering
whatsoever shall be caused in the execution of a sentence
lawfully imposed by a Court, including the sentence of
death, and that, since the method of hanging prescribed by
section 354(5) does not suffer from any constitutional
infirmity, the question of the Court substituting that
method by any other method does not arise for consideration.
While supporting these arguments of the Attorney
General, Shri Ram Jethmalani added that unless, on the face
of it, the method prescribed by a law for executing a
sentence is revolting to the conscience, the Courts must
surrender their discretion to the legislative judgment when
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 25 of 45
the challenge to the constitutionality of the law is based
on considerations which the Court is not equipped to
evaluate by manageable judicial standards. According to the
learned counsel, the Court’s evaluation of the method of
hanging prescribed by law shall have to be inevitably
subjective, almost to the point of being legislative in
character, which must be avoided at all costs. The
legislature has recognised means at its command for self-
education like the Law Commissions, the expression of public
opinion, the result of scientific investigations, the
sociological advance and, last but not the least, the
unfettered freedom available to the legislators to discuss
matters of moment on the floor of the House and to keep them
under constant scrutiny. "Hands off the Hanging" is the sum
and substance of Shri Jethmalani’s argument.
New dimensions were added to these arguments by the
other learned counsel. For example, Shri Salman Khurshid
advocated that instead of putting out life for ever by
executing the death sentence, persons sentenced to death
should be deprived of their eye sight by blinding them so
that, if and when they are reformed, they could be given
back their sight by transplantation or by whatever method
medicine may discover for restoring the eye sight. In the
meanwhile, says counsel, justice shall have been done.
First, as to Shri Jethmalani’s argument that we should
leave to the legislative wisdom the question as to how best
the death sentence should be executed and that we should not
project our subjective views into the decision of that
question. We find it impossible to accept this argument.
Matters of policy are certainly
35
for the legislature to consider and therefore, by what mode
or method the death sentence should be executed, is for the
legislature to decide. As stated in Grega v. Georgia, in a
democratic society legislatures, not Courts, are constituted
to respond to the moral values of the people. But the
function of the legislature ends with providing what it
considers to be the best method of executing the death
sentence. Where the function of the legislature ends, the
function of the judiciary begins. It is for the Courts to
decide upon the constitutionality of the method prescribed
by the legislature for implementing or executing a sentence.
Whether that method conforms to the dictates of the
Constitution is a matter not only subject to judicial review
but it constitutes a legitimate part of the judicial
function. As Judges, we cannot abdicate the obligation
imposed upon us by the Constitution and throw our hands in
despair with the consolation that after all, the chosen
representatives of the people have willed that hanging is
the best method of executing the death sentence. We respect
the judgment of the people’s representatives to the extent,
but only to the extent, that as a matter of policy they
considered that the method of hanging provided by section
354(5) of the Code is the least objectionable method for
executing the death sentence. But, what the policy judgment
of the legislature leaves outstanding for the Court’s
consideration is the question whether the particular method
prescribed by law for executing the death sentence is in
consonance with the Constitution. This latter question is
manifestly for the Courts to decide. The decision of that
question inevitably involves a value judgment based upon a
comparative evaluation of alternate methods for executing
the death sentence but, more than any such comparative
evaluation, our plain and primary duty is to examine
whether, even if the method selected by the legislature is
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 26 of 45
the least objectionable, it is still open to the objection
that in involves undue torture, degradation and cruelty as,
for example, by causing more pain than is strictly necessary
or by bringing about a lingering death or because the
particular method is liable, frequently, to fail in its
mechanism. Our task will end with pointing out why, if at
all, the method at present provided by law is contrary to
the mandate of the Constitution, even if it be less
objectionable than any other commonly accepted method of
executing the death sentence. We will not legislate by
directing the since, if at all, the provision contained in
section 354(5) is unconstitutional, the death sentence
imposed upon the petitioners shall be executed
36
by the method of electrocution or gas-chamber or lethal
injection or shooting or guillotine and the like. Nor can we
direct, as canvassed by Shri Khurshid, that the petitioners
be temporarily blinded. That would be legislating. To
pronounce upon the constitutionality of a law is not
legislating, even if such pronouncement involves the
consideration of the evolving standards of the society.
’Cruelty’ and ’torture’ are not static concepts. That is
why, the chopping off of limbs which was not considered
cruel centuries ago or, is not considered cruel in some
other parts of the world to-day, is impossible to conceive
as a punishment by applying the contemporary standards of
the Indian society. What might not have been regarded as
degrading or inhuman in days by gone may be revolting to the
new sensitivities which emerge as civilization advances. The
impact and influence of the awareness of such sensitivities
on the decision of the law’s validity is an inseparable
constituent of the judicial function.
This Court is not a third Chamber of the legislature.
It has no such extra-territorial ambitions and it does not
aspire to do the job of ’out-riders’, to use an expression
Lord Devlin. It is simply the highest Court of law and
justice in a country governed by a written Constitution,
which, it is its primary and exclusive function to
interpret. The care which we must take is that while
interpreting the laws and the Constitution, we ought not to
be swayed by passing passions or by populist sentiments. We
must do our duty by the Constitution, unaffected by
extraneous considerations and guided solely by the
obligation to be fair and just, almost to a fault.
The State seeks to discharge its burden by relying upon
the Reports of Commissions which are based on results of
scientific investigation into the mechanics of the hanging
process, the opinions of text-book writers, the predilection
of sociologists, the proclivities of reformers and, of
course, juristic exposition of the complex issue "to hang or
not to hang". To some of these we must now turn.
In the year 1949 the Government of United Kingdom
appointed a Commission to report upon the various facets of
the capital punishment. The Commission submitted its report
in September 1953 after extensive research into the
questions referred to it and after interviewing experts,
visiting jails and examining the merits and demerits of
hanging as a method for executing the death sentence.
Chapter 13 of the Royal Commission’s Report deals with
37
the "methods of execution". In paragraph 700 of that Chapter
the Commission records that it heard evidence on the
existing method of hanging from various witnesses, including
Prison Commissioners and Prison officials, one Mr. A.
Pierepoint, "the most experienced executioner in this
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 27 of 45
country", and under-sheriffs responsible for execution in
London and Lancashire. The Commission inspected execution
chambers in England and Scotland and was given
demonstrations of the procedure at an execution. They also
received evidence about executions in the United States by
means of electrocution and lethal gas. During their visit to
the United States, they took the opportunity of inspecting
the electric chair in two prisons. Lastly, they questioned
medical witnesses about possible new methods of execution.
In paragraph 703 of the Report the Commission notes
that public opinion was disturbed by evidence that the task
of hanging was sometimes bungled. In 1885 a condemned
murderer had to be reprieved after three unsuccessful
attempts had been made to hang him. There were also other
untoward occurrences: Occasionally, a man might be given too
short a drop and die slowly of strangulation, or too long a
drop and be decapitated. A Committee was therefore appointed
in U.K. in 1886 to report on the best way of ensuring "that
all executions may be carried out in a becoming manner
without risk of failure or miscarriage in any respect". This
Committee made recommendations about the length of drop,
improvements in the apparatus and preliminary tests and
precautions which were designed to ensure speedy and
painless death by dislocation of the vertebrae without
decapitation. The improved system of hanging now in vogue
came into being as a result of the recommendations of this
Committee. The Home Office informed the Commission that
"There is no record during the present century of any
failure or mishap in connection with an execution, and, as
now carried out, execution by hanging can be regarded as
speedy and certain".
In paragraph 704 of the Report, the Commission says
that it was "on the score of humanity" that execution by
hanging was defended by witness after witness. The Prison
Officers held the system of hanging to be as humane as
circumstances permit, while the Prison Medical Officers said
"We cannot conceive any other method which could be more
humane, efficient of expeditious than judicial hanging. The
Prison Chaplains called it "simple, humane
38
and expeditious". The British Medical Association told the
Commission that "hanging is probably as speedy and certain
as any other method could be adopted. The Royal Medico-
Psychological Association, after stating that the method of
execution ought to be "certain, humane, simple,
instantaneous and expeditious", said: "On the information
available to the Association, the method of hanging fulfils
these criteria more satisfactorily than any other so far
proposed or in practice". A knowledgeable witness told the
Commission that the method of hanging was "certain,
painless, simple, humane and expeditious".
In paragraph 705 of the Report, the Commission refers
to the interesting development that the method of execution
whose special merit was originally thought to be that it was
peculiarly degrading and therefore deterrent, was defended
before it on the ground that it was uniquely humane. The
reason for this surprising inversion is that as a result of
the recommendations made by the Committee which was
appointed in 1886, "a method originally barbarous..... has
been successfully humanised".
In Paragraph 708, the Commission proceeds to examine
the question whether there is any seemly and practicable
method of execution which is as painless as hanging or even
more speedy, or which, even though it may have no advantage
over hanging in those respects, is free from the degrading
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 28 of 45
associations of that method. If capital punishment were
being introduced for the first time, the Commission
considered it unlikely that hanging would be chosen as a
method for executing the death sentence. The Commission,
however, found that no useful propose would be served by
making experiments unless the necessity was urgent or the
utility evident. And this applied with special force to a
subject which was highly charged emotionally and was
exceptionally controversial.
In paragraph 709, the Commission refers to five methods
of execution of the death sentence which were then in vogue
in the different parts of the world. Electrocution was in
vogue in 23 States of U.S.A.; Guillotine in France and
Belgium; Hangiug in England, Scotland, the Commonwealth
countries and 10 States of U.S.A.; and lethal gas in 8
States of U.S.A. Shooting was in vogue in the State of Utah
in America which allowed a choice between hanging and
shooting. Besides, shooting was used in almost every
39
country as a method of execution of persons sentenced to
death for offences against the Military Code.
Rejecting Guillotine and shooting as methods for
executing the death sentence for the reason that the former
produces mutilation and the latter is inefficient, uncertain
and unacceptable as a standard method of civil executions,
the Commission examined the mechanics of hanging in
paragraphs 711 to 716 of its Report. Paragraph 714, which is
relevant for our purpose, shows that a valuable memorandum
was submitted to the Commission by the Coroner for the
Northern District of London, at whose instance many post-
mortem examinations following upon hanging were made by the
late Sir Bernard Spilsbury, a distinguished man of medicine
who had figured as a witness in many important trials, and
other highly qualified pathologists. The Coroner, Mr Bentley
Purchase, had access to the records of such post-mortem
examinations. The memorandum showed that the effective cause
of death in 58 executions at two prisons was "fracture
dislocation of cervical vertebrae with laceration or
crushing of the cord" and that any such dislocation causes
immediate unconsciousness, there being no chance of later
recovery of consciousness since breathing is no longer
possible. The beating of the heart thereafter for any time
upto 20 minutes is a purely automatic function. In the words
of the Corner: "I have no doubt of the efficacy and
immediate and painless finality of the present method of
judicial execution".
After examining the mechanics of the methods of
electrocution and lethal gas in paragraphs 717 to 722, the
Commission considers the question as to whether
electrocution or lethal gas was preferable to hanging on
considerations of "humanity, certainty and decency",
The Commission observes in paragraph 724 that the
requirements of humanity are essentially two: (1) that the
preliminaries to the acts of execution should be as quick
and as simple as possible, and free from anything that
unnecessarily sharpens the poignancy of the prisoner’s
apprehension, and (2) that the act of execution should
produce immediate unconsciousness passing quickly in into
death. Paragraph 725 contains a comparative table showing
the length of time taken by the preliminaries in
electrocution, lethal gas and hanging. On the basis of that
comparative analysis, the Commission records its conclusion
in paragraph 726 that, there was ’no room for doubt’ that in
the matter of time taken by the preliminaries, hanging was
superior to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 29 of 45
40
either electrocution or lethal gas. In all the three methods
the prisoner had to be restrained in some way or the other
prior to the execution but, in electrocution the execution
is preceded by shaving and handcuffing while, in lethal gas
the prisoner has to be stripped of his clothes, except a
pair of shorts, in order that pockets of gas may not persist
in the clothes. In addition, a stethoscope head has to be
strapped to the chest under the lethal gas method.
On the question of "certainty", the Commission observes
in paragraph 729 of its Report that the equipment required
for hanging is simpler than that which is required for
electrocution or execution by lethal gas. The lethal chamber
is a complicated piece of mechanism while the electric chair
depends for its efficacy upon the supply of electricity
which is usually taken from commercial sources. In fact, in
the United States, executions by electrocutions were
occasionally delayed by failure of the power. The Commission
recorded its conclusion by saying that neither electrocution
nor lethal chamber had any advantage over hanging, in so far
as the requirement of "certainty" is concerned.
In paragraph 732, the Commission deals with the third
aspect, namely, "Decency" in execution of the death
sentence. It says that while considering this aspect it had
kept two things in mind: Firstly, the obligation which
obviously rests on every civilised State to conduct its
judicial executions with decorum, and, secondly, that
judicial execution should be performed without brutality,
that it should avoid gross physical violence and should not
mutilate or distort the body. The Commission records its
conclusion by saying that in so far as the requirement of
decency is concerned, the other two methods have an
advantage over hanging though, all the three methods were
now used with all the decency possible in the circumstances.
The Commission records its final conclusion in
paragraph 734 of the Report by saying that after weighing
all the factors carefully and bearing in mind that the onus
of proof was on the advocates of change, it could not
recommend that either electrocution or gas chamber should
replace hanging as a method of judicial execution: In the
matter of humanity and certainty, the advantage lay with the
system of hanging; in regard to. one aspect of the
requirement of decency the other two methods were
preferable. But, according to the Commission, that advantage
could not be regarded as enough to turn the scale.
41
The counter-affidavit filed on behalf of the Government
of India by Shri P.S. Ananthanarayanan, Under Secretary,
Ministry of Home Affairs, shows that the Director General of
Health Services, who is the highest adviser to the
Government of India in these and allied matters, was
consulted on the question whether the system of hanging
which is prevalent in India for executing the death sentence
should be changed. The D.G.H.S. advised as follows:-
"Subject:-Mode of ending the life of a convict
sentenced to death.
Continuation this Directorate u.o. No. 31-204/55-
MI, dated the 10th April, 1956, on the above subject.
This Directorate has consulted the Administrative
Medical Officers, Chemical examiners, other
criminologists and experts, etc., On the subject and
the views expressed by them fall into the following
groups:-
(1) Those who consider the present method of hanging
being the best .... Number 15
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 30 of 45
(2) Those favouring Electrocution .... Number 17
(3) Those favouring Medication, etc. .... Number 3
Even though electrocution has been advocated as a
desirable method by a considerable number of those
consulted, it is not a method without its drawbacks in
that death is stated in this case not to be always
instantaneous or even painless and that this method
involves the setting up of a considerable mechanical
outfit. From the replies received from various sources,
we also find that those who can speak with the
authority of experience and knowledge have spoken with
conviction regarding judicial hanging, properly carried
out, as being the quickest and least painful method.
This is also the view of the Serologist and Chemical
Examiner to the Government of India, Calcutta and the
majority view of the Central Medico-Legal Advisory
Committee. We are inclined to agree with this view and
do not recommend any change in the present method of
execution by judicial hanging in the present state of
scientific knowledge."
42
Paragraph 16 of the counter-affidavit says that the D.G.H.S.
held to the same view as recently as in February 1982.
The 35th Report of the Law Commission of India on
Capital Punishment, dated September 30, 1967 deals with
"Execution of Sentences" in Chapter XV. The Commission
observes in paragraph 1097 of the Report that though hanging
continued to be the most prevalent method for executing the
death sentence, the course of events showed that it was
being slowly abandoned. Thus, while in 1930,17 States in
U.S.A. used to employ that method, only 6 retained it in
1967. Again, while it was in force in Yugoslavia before
1950, it was replaced by the firing squad in that year.
In paragraph 1098, the Law Commission deals briefly
with the Report of the Royal Commission of England while in
paragraph 1099, it discusses the Report of the Canadian
Committee on the same subject. It would appear from what the
Law Commission has stated in this paragraph that the
Canadian Committee considered four different methods of
execution, namely, hanging, electrocution, gas-chamber and
lethal injection. The last mentioned method was believed to
ensure instantaneous and painless death, but it could only
be accomplished by an intravenous injection requiring skill
and the Canadian Committee considered that it would not be
reasonable to expect a medical doctor to perform a task so
repugnant to the traditions of the medical profession.
Moreover, an intravenous could not be administered unless
the condemned person was entirely acquiescent. The Canadian
Committee appears to have noted that hangings in Canada were
not conducted with the same degree of precision as in U.K.,
as a result of which it was difficult to know how the death
was caused and whether the loss of consciousness had
supervened instantaneously. Holding on the basis of the
evidence before it that hanging was regarded generally as an
obsolete, if not a barbarous method, the Committee
recommended that hanging should be replaced by
electrocution.
In paragraphs 1101 to 1148 (pages 339 to 345), the Law
Commission of India extracts the views which were expressed
before it as to the ideal method for executing the death
sentence. Noting in paragraph 1149 that there was a
considerable body of opinion which would like hanging to be
replaced by something "more humane and more painless", the
Commission says in paragraph 1150 that to a certain extent
the matter was one of medical opinion. The
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 31 of 45
43
general view expressed before the Commission was that a
method which is certain, humane quick and decent should be
adopted for executing the death sentence. The society owed
it to itself that the agony at the exact point of execution
should be kept to the minimum. But the Commission felt that
it was difficult to express any positive opinion as to which
of the three methods-hanging, electrocution and gas-chamber-
satisfied these tests most, particularly when electrocution
and gas-chamber were untried in India. In paragraph 1151,
the Commission records its conclusion by saying:
"We do not therefore recommend a change in the law
on this point."
In other words, the recommendation of the Commission was
that death sentence should be executed by the method of
hanging prescribed in section 354(5) of the Criminal
Procedure Code, since there were no circumstances justifying
its substitution by any other method and since, no other
method was shown to be more satisfactory.
In February 1978, Dr. Hira Singh, Prison Adviser to the
National Institute of Social Defence, submitted his opinion
to the Ministry of Home Affairs, Government of India, as
follows:
"In ancient days the execution of death sentence
was often attended by cruel forms of torture and
suffering inflicted on the offender. With the passage
of time, however, the methods of execution have
undergone various changes. The old practices such as
beheading, drawing, stoning, impaling, precipitation
from a height, etc., have been gradually replaced in
all civilised countries by new methods of hanging,
electrocution, gas chamber and shooting. These changes
have occurred mainly on the premise that death penalty
means simply the deprivation of life and as such should
be made as quicker and less painful as possible. The
old methods were considered inhuman.
According to the study on Capital Punishment
published by the United Nations in 1962, hanging
remains the most frequent method of execution in
various coun-
44
tries including the United Kingdom and generally
throughout the Commonwealth. In the United States it is
no doubt losing ground in favour of electrocution and
lethal gas. The modern method of hanging differs from
its traditional form as it involves an abrupt and
immediate severance of the cervical vertebrae. The
whole process is carried out with care and skill so as
to avoid any bungling and untoward incident. The State
Jail Manuals contain elaborate instructions on the
arrangement for execution, inspection of gallows,
testing of equipment and the manner of execution."
The Prison Adviser thereafter sets out guidelines contained
in the Model Prison Manual which have to be followed while
executing the death sentence by the method of hanging. In
paragraph 3 of his opinion he says that the chances of a
mishap in the electrocution process cannot be eliminated
altogether and that in the United States, there have been
occasions when the current failed to reach the chair when
the switch was engaged. After describing the procedure which
is adopted in the methods of electrocution, gas chamber and
shooting, he says that there are cases on record where
executions by shooting were bungled by nervous firing
squads. Dr. Hira Singh concludes:
"The question of introducing electric chair in
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 32 of 45
place of hanging as a mode of execution may be examined
from the administrative as well as humanitarian view-
points. It is often argued that death by hanging takes
lesser time to execute than the other modes, though it
may not be invariably true. In any case electric chair
has in no way proved to be more efficient in reducing
pain or suffering inflicted on the offender. In hanging
the body is liable to be disfigured but in
electrocution also the leg is some-times slightly
burnt. Above all electrocution involves much costlier
equipment and operational preciseness than hanging. In
view of such considerations there seems to be no
particular advantage in switching over to the electric
chair in the execution of death sentence even if such a
system may outwardly look to be more sophisticated."
The opinion of the Prison Adviser is at Annexure V to the
counter-affidavit of Shri P.S. Ananthanarayanan.
45
We had allowed one Dr. Chandrakant of the All India
Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi, to intervene in
these proceedings. We may, with some advantage, refer to his
written submissions. Dr. Chandrakant did his M.B.B.S. in
1970 and was in the Army Medical Corps for a period of five
years. He holds a Diploma in Oto-rhino-Laryngology and the
degree of M.D. in Forensic Medicine and Toxicology. It
appears that he has also done a three-year degree course of
LL.B. from the Allahabad University. He is presently working
as a Lecturer in the Department of Forensic Medicine of the
Institute, in which capacity he is required to conduct
Medico-legal autopsies. He claims that he has conducted
approximately 1100 medico-legal autopsies uptil now.
According to him, hanging is the best method for executing
the death sentence since by that method, death ensues
instantaneously due to a combination of shock, asphyxia and
crushing of Spinal Medulla. He says that there are
misconceived notions about judicial hanging due to
improvised and faulty mechanism of the process involved in
suicidal hangings and due to lack of knowledge of the
anatomical structure of the neck and human body, Dr.
Chandrakant describes the human anatomy and says that in
hanging, whenever there is injury to Medulla, to Pons or
Medulla oblongata, all the three vital centres called as
"Tripod of life" are affected which causes instantaneous
death. Dr. Chandrakant has given a brief description of
about 15 different methods which have been followed at one
time or the other for executing the death sentence.
In a book called "Hanging through the ages (History of
Capital Punishment)" by George R. Scott (Torchstream Books,
London), the entire history of the technique of hanging has
been traced. The author says at page 211 that the
introduction of an improved, technique of hanging has served
to expedite the process of hanging, giving less pain to the
prisoner and that, "the long drop" and other improvements
have achieved a great deal though, despite everything that
has been done, accidents are inevitable.
In "Kenny’s Outlines of Criminal Law," (19th Ed. 1966)
edited by J.W. Cecil Turner, it is stated at page 618, foot-
note 5 that: "Hanging does not operate now through
suffocation, but by a ‘long drop’, invented by Prof.
Haughton of Dublin, which dislocates the vertebrae and is
calculated to produce an instantaneous and painless death."
46
In "New Horizons in Criminology" by Harry Elmer Barnes
and Negley K. Teeters (3rd Ed. 1966), it is stated: "Society
has resorted to many different methods in executing criminal
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 33 of 45
and other allegedly dangerous persons. Drowning, stoning to
death, burning at the state and beheading have all been used
in the past. Of all the modern methods of administering the
death penalty, hanging has been the most widely used. We
read of hangings in the earliest historic literature and
throughout the world even today it is still the most widely
used.,,
In a publication called ‘Capital Punishment’ under the
auspices of the United Nations, Department of Economic and
Social Affairs, New York, 1962, it is stated in paragraph 57
of the chapter called ‘The Execution’ that in earlier times,
a great variety of methods of execution was known to the
law, the carrying out of a sentence of death being sometimes
attended by ‘cruel forms of torture intended in certain
cases to aggravate the suffering. The publication says: .‘On
grounds of humanity and of the respect due to the human
person the modern law has in general dropped these
practices. The death penalty means nowadays, simply the
deprivation of life. The differences which today exist
regarding the methods of carrying out the death sentence are
attributable to the efforts made to render death quicker and
less painful". The same paragraph mentions that hanging has
generally been abandoned in the United States. According to
the issue of ‘Time’ magazine dated January 24, 1983, only
four States of America still prescribe hanging as a method
for executing the death sentence. Paragraph 59 of U.N.
publication says that "Hanging remains the most frequent
method in use". It lists over 25 countries of the world in
which the method of hanging is used for executing the death
sentence.
In so far as the judicial exposition of this subject is
concerned, attention may be drawn to the latest decision of
this Court in Bachan Singh in which the majority said that
under the successive Criminal Procedure Codes which have
been in force in India for about 100 years, the sentence of
death is to be carried out by the method of hanging. The
founding fathers of the Constitution, some of whom were
distinguished jurists (in the proper sense of that term),
cannot be assumed to be ignorant of the provision contained
in section 354(5) of the Code. And, despite the fact that
the death sentence has to be carried out by the mode
prescribed in that
47
section, they recognised the existence and validity of that
sentence. The majority accepted the proposition that by
reason of the provision contained in Article 21, no person
can be deprived of his life or personal liberty except in
accordance with fair, just and reasonable procedure
established by law. Applying that postulate, it observed
that the framers of the Constitution did not consider that
either the death sentence or the traditional mode of its
execution prescribed by section 354(5) of the Code was a
degrading punishment which would defile the dignity of the
individual within the contemplation of the Constitution.
These observations are significant, with the caveat that the
question as regards the validity of section 354(5) of the
Code was not directly in issue in Bachan Singh.
This then is the data on which reliance is or can be
placed by the Union of India for discharging the burden
which rests upon it for proving that the method of hanging
prescribed by section 354(5) of the Code does not violate
the guarantee contained in Article 21 of the Constitution.
Though it must be conceded that the various learned
counsel for the petitioners led by Shri R.K. Garg and Dr.
N.M. Ghatate have argued their respective cases with great
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 34 of 45
fervour, industry and tenacity, the writ petitions furnish
no data or reasons whatsoever as to why the method of the
hanging is violative of Article 21. Mostly, the prayer
clauses of petitions simply contain a request that the
system of hanging should be declared to be violative of
Articles 14, 19 and 21 of the Constitution. Articles 14 and
19 were hardly even mentioned in the arguments on the main
point and, rightly so. The arguments advanced in regard to
the violation of Article 21 went far beyond the scope of the
averments in the writ petitions but that is not
unprecedented in this Court. Moreover, in a matter involving
the question of life and death, technicalities cannot be
allowed to defeat justice. We could have asked the
petitioners to amend their petitions but rather than doing
so, we decided to hear a full-dressed argument on the
validity of section 354(5) of the Code, regardless of the
paucity of pleadings, especially since the writ petitions do
not involve any challenge under Article 14 of the
Constitution. We have heard the petitioners’ counsel at
length on every conceivable aspect of the question involved
in these petitions. We have proceeded to this judgment, on a
careful consideration of the diverse submissions made before
us.
48
Dr. Ghatate, who began the arguments on behalf of the
petitioners, contended that the method of hanging involves
pain, degradation and suffering wherefor that method
violates Article 21 and cannot be used for executing the
death sentence. In support of this argument, he drew our
attention to certain passages in the dissenting judgment of
Bhagwati, J., in Bachan Singh. At page 285 of the Report,
the learned Judge has extracted a passage from a decision of
the California Supreme Court in which it is said that,
"Penologists and medical experts agree that the process of
carrying out a verdict of death is often so degrading and
brutalizing to the human spirit as to constitute
psychological torture". In the absence of citation, we are
unable to trace the decision or to see the context in which
the California Supreme Court made the particular
observation. We do not know who these "Penologists and
medical experts" are and where they have expressed agreed
opinions attributed to them. It is not even clear whether
the California Court was dealing with the validity of death
penalty or with the methods of executing that penalty and,
if the latter, whether it has condemned every method of the
execution and not the method of hanging only. The purport of
the passage seems to indicate that the question under
inquiry was that death sentence is a ‘cruel unusual
punishment’. As we have shown, the expert evidence before
the Royal Commission of U.K. was quite to the contrary,
especially in regard to the improved technique of hanging
which came into operation after the recommendations of the
Committee appointed in 1886 were implemented.
At page 287 of the Report Bhagwati, J., has made
certain observations which also Dr. Ghatate has pressed into
service. We have already extracted those observations while
dealing with the preliminary objection of the learned
Solicitor General. The sum and substance of the particular
passage is that "hanging is undoubtedly accompanied by
intense physical torture and pain". In support of this
conclusion, the learned Judge quotes Warden Duffy of San
Quentin, a high security prison in U.S.A,, who had described
with particularity the procedure which obtains at the
hangings of prisoners. After extracting a statement of
Warden Duffy at page 288, the learned Judge says: "If the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 35 of 45
drop is too short, there will be a slow and agonising death
by strangulation. On the other hand, if the drop is too
long, the head will be torn off. In England centuries of
practice have produced a detailed chart relating a man’s
weight and physical condition to the proper length of drop,
but even there mistakes
49
have been made." Our difficulty again is the absence of
citation of the descriptive hassage which appears at page
288 of the Report. We do not know where, and in which year,
Warden Duffy gave the particular description of the hanging
process. The process described by him is apparently similar
to the one which is now regarded as outmoded and is no
longer in use. Besides, Warden Duffy was a stern opponent of
the capital punishment. In a series of articles under the
caption "San Quentin is my Home" which appeared in the
Saturday Evening Post, March 25-May 13, 1950, he denounced
the capital sentence by pointing out, inter alia, how every
known method of executing that sentence is fraught with pain
and suffering. We will have occasion to call attention to
what he has to say about the Gas Chamber too. But evidence
before us shows that the mechanics of the method of hanging
has undergone significant improvement over the years and if
the expression is not inapt in the context, hanging has been
almost perfected into a science. The chances of a mishap are
minimal now though, the chances of an accident can never be
eliminated totally, If that could be done, the word
"accident" will not appear in the dictionary of wise men. In
regard to the improvements effected in the method of
hanging, we will only draw attention to the findings of the
Royal Commission and the opinion expressed by other experts
to which we have already referred.
Finally, Dr. Ghatate relies upon an account given in
1927 by a Surgeon who witnessed a double execution, which
has been extracted in the judgment of Bhagwati, J., at page
288 of the Report. It appears from the Surgeon’s account
that ‘one of the supposed corpses’ gave a gasp which the
Surgeon was, very naturally, horrified to hear. Two bodies
not completely dead were then raised to the scaffold again.
In his account the Surgeon has stated that though
dislocation of the neck is the ideal aimed at in hanging,
that had proved rather an exception in his own post-mortem
findings which showed that in the majority of instances, the
cause of death was strangulation and asphyxia. Relying on
this account Bhagwati, J., concludes: "These passages
clearly establish beyond doubt that the execution of
sentence of death by hanging does involve intense physical
pain and suffering, though it may be regarded by some as
more humane than electrocution or application of lethal
gas." With great respect, our difficulty is the same as in
regard to the two earlier passages extracted by the learned
Judge, one from the California Supreme Court judgment and
the other from Warden Duffy. We
50
do not know who the Surgon is and from where the quotation
is extracted. Besides, as we have repeatedly said, there has
been a significant improvement in the mechanism of hanging.
Old experiences are not to be discarded out of hand but they
cannot be applied to new situations without a critical
examination of their relevance to those situations.
Otherwise, technical sciences, particular the medical
science, shall have made their remarkable advance in vain.
We have given our anious and respectful consideration
to the passages extracted and the observations made by our
learned Brother Bhagwati. The fact that these are contained
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 36 of 45
in a majority judgment is no justification for ignoring
them. In a matter as socially sensitive as this, it is
improper to overlook the opposing point of view, whether it
is expressed in a minority judgment or elsewhere.
Bhagwati, J., says in the last passage extracted by us
from his judgment that the method of hanging is perhaps
regarded by some as more humane than electrocution or the
application of lethal gas. Dr. Ghatate has his own point of
view. He contends that electrocution is the quickest and the
simplest method of executing the death sentence, in which
there is no scope for failure of the apparatus. He has two
alternative submissions to make: One, falling electrocution,
administration of lethal injection should be adopted as a
method for executing the death sentence and, two, failing
lethal injection, shooting by a firing squad should be
resorted to. We assume that the learned counsel has obtained
his client’s instructions on the use of these alternative
methods, particularly shooting.
Truly, we are not concerned to determine the merits and
demerits of these alternative methods of execution which are
canvassed by the learned counsel and some of which are in
vogue in some other parts of the world. If the method
prescribed by section 354(5) of the Code is violative of
Article 21, the matter must rest there because. as contended
by Dr. Ghatate himself, the Court cannot substitute any
other method of execution for the method prescribed by law
and which alone is permissible under the law. However, an
understanding of the process involved in the competing
methods used for executing the death sentence and their
comparative assessment is not altogether pointless. If it
can be demonstrated clearly that some other method has a
real and definite advantage over the method of hanging, the
question will naturally arise as to why the State does not
adopt that method. An arbitrary rejection
51
of a method proved to be simpler, quicker and more humane
than hanging may not answer the constitutional prescription.
The Royal Commission mentions in paragraph 717 of its
Report that during their visit to America, they inspected
the electric chairs in the Sing Sing Prison, New York and
the District of Columbia Jail, Washington, and that they
received evidence about the use of the electric chair in
other States. The Commission has given the following account
of the method of electrocution based primarily on the
information obtained by them in Washington:
"The execution takes place at 10 a.m. At midnight
on the preceding night the condemned man is taken from
the condemned cell block to a cell adjoining the
electrocution chamber. About 5.30 a.m., the top of his
head and the calf of one leg are shaved to afford
direct contact with the electrodes. (The prisoner is
usually handcuffed during this operation to prevent him
from seizing the razor.) At 7.15 a.m., the death
warrant is read to him and about 10 O’clock he is taken
to the electrocution chamber.... Three officers strap
the condemned man to the chair, tying him around the
waist, legs and wrists. A mask is placed over his face
and the electrodes are attached to his head and legs.
As soon as this operation is completed (about two
minutes after he has left the cell,) the signal is
given and the switch is pulled by the, electrician; the
current is left on for two minutes, during which there
is alternation of two or more different voltages. When
it is switched off, the body slumps forward in the
chair. The prisoner does not make any sound when the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 37 of 45
current is turned on, and unconsciousness is apparently
instantaneous. He is not, however, pronounced dead for
some minutes after the current is disconnected. The leg
is sometimes slightly burned, but the body is not
otherwise marked or mutilated."
In paragraph 7 8, the Commission says:
"No case of mishap was recorded in Washington, but
it seems that in some other States there have been
occasions when the current failed to reach the chair
when the switch was engaged. Some States install an
emergency
52
generator in order that an execution may not be delayed
by failure of the commercial."
Lest it be thought that the Report of the Royal
Commission, having been given 30 years back, the description
of the process of electrocution contained therein may not
apply to the modern conditions, we may draw attention to the
cover story on the death penalty which appended in the issue
of ‘Time’ magazine, dated Jan. 24, 1983. The write-up. which
is predominantly in favour of abolition of the death
sentence, contains a vivid description of the methods of
electrocution, gas chamber and lethal injection which are
used in some of the States in America. The cover story, "An
Eye for an eye", gives the following description of
electrocution at page 12 of the issue;
"The chair is bolted to the floor near the back of
a 12 ft. by 18 ft. room. You sit on a seat of cracked
rubber secured by rows of copper tacks. Your ankles are
strapped into half-moon-shaped foot cuffs lined with
canvas. A 2-in-wide greasy leather belt with 28 buckle
holes and worn grooves where it has been pulled very
tight many times is secured around your waist just
above the hips. A cool metal cone encircles your head.
You are now only moments away from death.
But you still have a few seconds left. Time
becomes stretched to the outermost limits. To your
right you see the mahogany floor divider that separates
four brown church-type pews from the rest of the room.
They look odd in this beige Zen-like chamber. There is
another door at the back through which the witnesses
arrive and sit in the pews. You stare up at two groups
of fluorescent lights on the ceiling. They are on. The
paint on the ceiling is peeling.
You fit in neat and snug. Behind the chair’s back
leg on your right is a cable wrapped in gray tape. It
will sluice the electrical current to three other wires
: two going to each of your feet, and the third to the
cone on top of your head. The room is very quiet.
During your brief walk here, you looked over shoulder
and saw early morning light creeping over the Berkshire
Hills. Then into this silent tomb.
53
The air vent above your head in the ceiling begins
to hum. This means the executioner has turned on the
fan to suck up the smell of burning flesh. There is
little time left. On your right you can see the waist-
high, one-way mirror in the wall. Behind the mirror is
the executioner, standing before a gray marble control
panel with gauges, switches and a foot-long lever of
wood and metal at hip level.
The executioner will pull this lever four times.
Each time 2,000 volts will course through your body,
making your eyeballs first bulge, then burst, and than
broiling your brains ..."
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 38 of 45
Electrocution was first introduced in the New York State
prison at Auburn on August 6, 1890. The initial victim was
one William Kemmler whose challenge to the validity of the
method of electrocution as a cruel and unusual punishment
was rejected by the U.S. Supreme Court. Though this method
is now advocated as a humanitarian move, in reality, its
original introduction appears to have been the result of the
effort of an electrical company to market its products.
Though it is generally believed that death by
electrocution is entirely painless, a distinguished French
scientist, L.G.V. Rota, disputes this contention. Labelling
this method of executing the death sentence as a form of
torture, Rota contends that a condemned victim may be alive
for several minutes after the current has passed through his
body without a physician being certain whether death has
actually occurred or not. He adds that some persons have
greater physiological resistance to the electric current
than others, and that, no matter how weak the person, death
cannot supervene instantly. Another attack on the pain of
death in electrocution was made by Nicola Tesla, the
electrical wizard. The opposite view is
54
expressed by Robert G. Elliott in ‘Agent of Death’ (New
York: Dutton, 1940). Robert Elliott, one-time executioner
for several eastern States, who officiated at 387 executions
maintains that electrocution is painless.
Power seldom fails in countries like America, U.S.S.R.,
and Japan. Even then, the failure of electrical energy
supplied by commercial undertakings has been considered in
America as an impediment in the use of the electric chair.
With frequent failures of electrical power in our country,
the electric chair will become an instrument of torture. One
can well imagine the consequences of the use of the electric
chair in the city of Calcutta or, for the matter of that, in
the capital City of Delhi. For technical reasons, even the
Supreme Court complex is not spared from frequent load-
shedding during working hours. Lawyers, litigants and Judges
have now trained themselves to suffer the inconvenience
arising from failure of electricity. But, it would be most
unfair to expect a prisoner condemned to death to get into
the electric chair twice or thrice, for the reason that the
electric current failed during the process of electrocution.
It is not our intention to blame anyone for the power crisis
because it would seem that it is partly due to natural
causes and is not man-made. But facts are facts must be
faced.
Execution by lethal gas is discussed by the Royal
Commission in paragraphs 719 to 722 of its Report. The
Commission says in paragraph 719 that they did not inspect
any lethal gas chamber during their visit to America, but
they were supplied with written evidence about execution by
lethal gas. They also had the advantage of hearing evidence
from one Mr. Philip Allen, the then Deputy Chairman of the
Prison Commission and of receiving a report from the English
Neurologist, Dr. Macdonald Critchley, both of whom had
inspected the lethal chamber at St. Quentin Prison,
California, of which the famous Clinton Duffy was a warden.
In paragraph 720 of the Report, the Royal Commission says:
"The lethal chamber is very elaborate in comparison with the
apparatus needed for other methods of execution. It is
expensive to install and requires a complicated series of
operations to produce the gas and to dispose of it
afterwards". The description of the gas chamber method given
by the Royal Commission is like this:
The chamber is required to be hermetically sealed
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 39 of 45
to prevent leakage of cyanide gas, the doors leading to
the
55
chamber are required to be connected with an
electrically controlled panel, the prisoner’s arms,
legs and abdomen are tied to the chair with leather
straps, a pound of sodium cyanide pellets is placed in
a trap in the seat of the chair and three pints of
sulphuric acid and six pints of water mixed in a lead
container are placed in a position to receive the
cyanide pellets. A rubber hose is connected to the head
of a stethoscope which is strapped to the prisoner’s
chest. The entire clothing of the prisoner is removed
except for shorts. Finally, a leather mask covers the
prisoner’s face. After the prisoner is pronounced dead,
Amonia gas is forced into the chamber until the
indicators within the chamber show that all cyanide gas
has been neutralised. The Amonia gas is then removed by
a specially constructed exhaust fan.
Paragraph 721 of the Royal Commission’s Report shows that
the length of time taken by this method of execution is
about 45 minutes. In paragraph 722 the Commission says that
when this method was first employed, it was thought that the
gas had a suffocating effect which would cause acute
distress, if not actual pain, before the prisoner became
unconscious. According to the Commission, it seems to be now
generally agreed that unconsciousness ensues very rapidly in
the gas chamber method.
Clinton Duffy, warden of San Quentin Prison,
California, says that the operation of the gas chamber
execution includes "funnels, rubber gloves, graduates,
towels soap, pliers, scissors, fuses and a mop: in addition,
sodium cyanide eggs, sulphuric acid, distilled water, and
amonia".
Coming to the method of shooting by a firing squad, we
have already extracted an opinion which shows that there are
chances of bungling in that method. But a more serious
objection to which this method is open is that it is the
favourite past-time of military regimes which trample upon
human rights with impunity. They shoot their citizens for
sport. Shooting is an uncivilised method of
56
extinguishing life and it is enough to say in order to
reject in that the particular method is most recklessly and
want only used for liquidating opposition and smothering
dissent in countries which do not respect the rule of law.
Lastly, murders by shooting are becoming a serious menace to
law and order in our country. Shooting by the State in order
to kill for executing the order of a Court of law will
unwittingly confer respectability on the ’shoot to kill,
tactics which are alarmingly growing in proportion.
What remains now to consider is the system of lethal
injection. The Royal Commission has discussed that method in
paragraphs 735 to 749 of its Report. Lethal injection is by
and large an untried method. But that is not its most
serious defect. The injection is required to be administered
intravenously, which is a delicate and skilled operation.
The Prison Medical Officers who were interviewed by the
Royal Commission doubted whether the system of lethal
injection was more humane than hanging (See paragraph 739 of
the Report). The British Medical Association told the
Commission that no medical practitioner should be asked to
take part in bringing about the death of a convicted
murderer and that the Association would be most strongly
opposed to any proposal to introduce a method of execution
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 40 of 45
which would require the services of a medical practitioner,
either in carrying out the actual process of killing or in
instructing others in the technique of that process. The
Commission expressed its conclusion in paragraph 749 by
saying that it could not recommend that, in the present
circumstances, lethal injection should be substituted for
hanging since they were not satisfied that executions
carried out by the administration of lethal injections would
bring about death more quickly, painlessly and decently in
all cases. The Commission, however, recommended, unanimously
and emphatically, that the question should be periodically
examined, especially in the light of the progress made in
the science of anaesthetics.
We may lastly refer to the affidavit filed by one Dr.
N.P. Singh who was allowed to intervene on behalf of the
National Association of Critical Care Medicine (India), New
Delhi. He says in his affidavit that society has come to
realise that death by hanging is not a merciful and pleasant
way of putting a patient to a terminal end: "As members of
the medical profession and the Association, we feel that a
patient may be put to sleep by any sleep inducing injection
(barbiturates) and subsequently, the above mentioned
electrocution
57
and gas chamber methods may be applied as the patient’s
sense would have been dulled by the drug injection". This
system certainly has the merit of naivete and novelty but,
on the face of it, the system is impracticable and would
appear to involve complications and torture to an uncommon
degree. We may in this behalf draw attention to an article
"The Death Penalty: Moral argument and capricious practice"
by Andrew Rutherford, a senior Lecturer in Law at the
Southampton University, which appeared in ’The Listener’ of
July 7, 1983, published by the British Broadcasting
Corporation. In that article, the writer refers to an
incident to the effect that in 1982 December, a prisoner was
put to death in Texas by means of an injection of sodium
pentothol. The incident led the American Medical Association
to declare: "The use of a lethal injection as a means of
terminating the life of a convict is not the practice of
medicine". The writer proceeds to say that there is not
likely to be any great enthusiasm for the method of
electrocution as well, since in April 1983, it took three
30-seconds shots of 1,900 volts before a man in Alabama was
pronounced dead.
It is clear from this narrative that neither
electrocution, nor lethal gas, nor shooting, nor even the
lethal injection has any distinct or demonstrable advantage
over the system of hanging. Therefore, it is impossible to
record the conclusion with any degree of certainty that the
method of hanging should be replaced by any of these
methods.
But, for due compliance with the mandate of Article 21,
it is not enough to find that none of the other methods of
execution has a real advantage over the method of hanging.
The other methods may have some of the vices of being
impracticable, complicated, slow and uncertain. That is only
one side of the picture because, the circumstance that the
other methods are not feasible does not establish of its own
force that the method of hanging is free from blame. The
weakness of defence cannot establish the plaintiff’s case.
In other words, though hanging may not suffer in comparison
with the other methods, what we must determine is whether,
hanging as a method of executing the death sentence,
considered in isolation, that is to say, without comparison
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 41 of 45
with the other methods, offends against the cannons of
Article 21.
There is a responsible body of scientific and legal
opinion which we have discussed, which holds the view that
hanging by rope
58
is not a cruel mode of executing the death sentence. That
system is in operation in large parts of the civilised
world. That was the only method of executing the death
sentence which was known to the Constituent Assembly and yet
it did not express any disapproval of that method, though it
touched upon the question of death sentence while dealing
with the President’s power of pardon under Article 72 (1)
(c) of the Constitution.
Having given our most anxious consideration to the
central point of inquiry, we have come to the conclusion
that, on the basis of the material to which we have referred
extensively, the State has discharged the heavy burden which
lies upon it to prove that the method of hanging prescribed
by section 354(5) of the Code of Criminal Procedure does not
violate the guarantee contained in Article 21 of the
Constitution. The material before us shows that the system
of hanging which is now in vogue consists of a mechanism
which is easy to assemble. The preliminaries to the act of
hanging are quick and simple and they are free from anything
that would unnecessarily sharpen the poignancy of the
prisoner’s apprehension. The chances of an accident during
the course of hanging can safely be excluded. The method is
a quick and certain means of executing the extreme penalty
of law. It eliminates the possibility of a lingering death.
Unconsciousness supervenes almost instantaneously after the
process is set in motion and the death of the prisoner
follows as a result of the dislocation of the cervical
vertebrae. The system of hanging, as now used, avoids to the
full extent the chances of strangulation which results on
account of too short a drop or of decapitation which results
on account of too long a drop. The system is consistent with
the obligation of the State to ensure that the process of
execution is conducted with decency and decorum without
involving degradation of brutality of any kind.
At the moment of final impact when life becomes
extinct, some physical pain would be implicit in the very
process of the ebbing out of life. But, the act of hanging
causes the least pain imaginable on account of the fact that
death supervenes instantaneously. ’Imaginable’, because in
the very nature of things, there are no survivors who can
give first-hand evidence of the pain involved in the
execution of a death sentence. Dead men tell no tales. The
question as regards the factor of pain has therefore to be
judged on the basis of scientific investigations and by
applying the test of reason. The conclusion that the system
of hanging is as painless
59
as is possible in the circumstances, that it causes no
greater pain than any other known method of executing the
death sentence and that it involves no barbarity, torture or
degradation is based on reason, supported by expert evidence
and the findings of modern medicine.
On the question of pain involved in a punishment, the
concern of law has to be to ensure that the various steps
which are attendant upon or incidental to the execution of
any sentence, more so the death sentence, do not constitute
punishments by themselves. If a prisoner is sentenced to
death, it is lawful to execute that punishment and that
only. He cannot be subjected to humiliation, torture or
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 42 of 45
degradation before the execution of that sentence, not even
as necessary steps in the execution of that sentence. That
would amount to inflicting a punishment on the prisoner
which does not have the authority of law. Humaneness is the
hall-mark of civilised laws. Therefore, torture, brutality,
barbarity, humiliation and degradation of any kind is
impermissible in the execution of any sentence. The process
of hanging does not any of these, directly, indirectly or
incidentally.
Accordingly, we hold that the method prescribed by
section 354(5) of the Code of Criminal Procedure for
executing the death sentence does not violate the provision
contained in Article 21 of the Constitution.
There is one point which still remains to be considered
and that is the point made by Shri R.K. Garg. He contends
that it is inhuman to kill under any circumstances, even
under a judgment of a Court and, therefore, no death
sentence can be executed at all by means fair or foul. The
fact that the method prescribed by law for executing the
death sentence is humane makes no difference for, according
to him, Article 21 imposes a total prohibition on the taking
of human life, which would include the execution of death
sentence. It is impossible to accept this contention. The
argument, in truth and substance, is aimed at the validity
of the death sentence itself and, indeed, much of what Shri
Garg said is directed at showing the invalidity of section
302 of the Penal Code rather than the invalidity of section
354(5) of the Code of Criminal Procedure. We are unable to
appreciate how it is unlawful, in the abstract and in the
absolute, to execute a lawful order. If it is lawful to
impose the sentence of death in appropriate cases, it would
be lawful to
60
execute that sentence in an appropriate manner. Article 21,
undoubtedly, has as much relevance on the passing of a
sentence, as on the manner of executing it. Therefore, a
two-fold consideration has to be kept in mind in the area of
sentencing. Substantively, the sentence has to meet the
constitutional prescription contained, especially, in
Articles 14 and 21. Procedurally, the method by which the
sentence is required by law to be executed has to meet the
mandate of Article 21. The mandate of Article 21 is not that
the death sentence shall not be executed but that it shall
not be executed in a cruel, barbarous or degrading manner.
If we were to accept the argument of Shri Garg, the
imposition of death sentence would become an exercise in
futility: pass the sentence of death if you may but, it
shall not be executed in any manner, under any
circumstances. A Constitution so carefully conceived as ours
cannot be construed to produce such a startling result.
Indeed, the argument, if carried to its logical conclusion
will make it impossible to execute any sentence whatsoever,
particularly of imprisonment, because every sentence of
imprisonment necessarily involves pain and suffering to a
lesser or greater degree. Painless punishment is a
contradiction in terms.
The constraints of Bachan Singh deserve to be preserved
but that means that it is only a rare degree of malevolence
which invites and justifies the imposition of death
sentence. Granting that the sentence of death is
constitutionally valid, not even the sophisticated
sensitivities can justly demand that those upon whom the
extreme penalty of law is imposed because of the magnitude
of their crime, should not be made to suffer the execution
of that sentence, unaccompanied by torture or degradation of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 43 of 45
any kind. If the larger interests of the community as
opposed to the interests of an individual require that the
death sentence should be imposed in an exceptional class of
cases, the same societal interests would justify the
execution of that sentence, though in strict conformity with
the requirements of Article 21.
Though Article 21 was the focal point of this case,
almost everyone of the learned counsel appearing on behalf
of the petitioners drew inspiration from the Eighth
Amendment to the United States Constitution which provides
that "Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive
fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted."
61
The prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment
dates back to the Magna Carta though it found recognition in
the English Law by its adoption in the English Declaration
of Rights in 1688. The purpose of this enactment was to
check the barbarous punishments which were common during the
regime of the Stuarts, like pillory, disemboweling,
decapitation and drawing and quartering. As a result of the
English reform movement which was started in the seventeenth
century by the European humanists, these punishments
gradually fell into disrepute. The fundamental principal
underlying the prohibition against cruel and unusual
punishments was incorporated into the Bill of Rights in
1791.
The early development of law in America shows that the
prohibition against cruel and unusual punishments concerned
itself with unusual cruelty only, the emphasis being upon
"unnecessary cruelty and pain". In Kemmler, death by
electrocution was held not necessarily cruel. In O’Neil v.
Vermont Justice Field, in his dissenting opinion, enlarged
the concept of unusual punishment to cover penalties "which
shock the sense of justice". In Trop v. Dulles a sharply
divided Court held that divesture of citizenship was
constitutionally forbidden. Chief Justice Warren, speaking
for three Justices, observed that the content of the Eighth
Amendment was not static and that it "must draw its meaning
from the evolving standards of decency that mark the
progress of a maturing society". According to the learned
Chief Justice, the Eighth Amendment whose "basic concept is
nothing less than the dignity of man", ensures "the
principle of civilized treatment". After the decision in
Troop, the American Supreme Court has formulated a
sophisticated definition of the Eighth Amendment clause in a
series of important cases called the "18 Key cases". A
resume of those cases can be found in ’Substantive Criminal
Law’ by Prof. M. Cherif Bassiouni (Ed. 1978, pp. 44-45). It
shows that even a second electrocution after the failure of
the first attempt, provided it is not an intentional effort
to inflict unnecessary suffering, was held not violative of
the Eighth Amendment (Louisiana v. Resweber. It was observed
in that case that:
"the cruelty against which the Constitution
protects a convicted man is cruelty inherent in the
method of
62
punishment, not the necessary suffering involved in any
method employed to extinguish life humanely. No one can
deny that some suffering and anguish is bound to result
to the condemned man at the time of execution of his
death sentence. But it is not wholly inappropriate to
observe that having had the opportunity to avoid that
suffering and anguish, he chose the path of risking it
in favour of earning some other benefit. His minimal
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 44 of 45
suffering is real, but so we believe was the suffering
of his victims and even so will be the suffering of the
victims of those other criminals who believe that they
can commit crimes of great atrocity with relative
impugnity".
It is this ’relative impunity’ which attracts the rule in
Bachan Singh.
Though the Eighth Amendment has thus a dynamic content
which has been evolved over the years as public moral
perceptions changed from time to time, several concurring
opinion show that in America, capital punishment is not
considered to be violative of the Eighth Amendment. In the
words of Chief Justice Earl Warren, "the death penalty has
been employed throughout our history, and, in a day which it
is still widely accepted, it cannot be said to violate the
constitutional concept of cruelty". What the Eighth
Amendment prohibits is "something inhuman and barbarous and
something more than the mere extinguishment of life". The
suffering necessarily involved in the execution of death
sentence is not banned by the Eighth Amendment though the
cruel form of execution is.
No sustenance can therefore be derived from the Eighth
Amendment to the argument that either the death sentence or
the method of executing that sentence by hanging is
violative of Article 21 on the ground that death sentence is
barbarous or that the method of hanging is cruel, inhuman or
degrading. Hanging as a mode of execution is not relentless
in its severity. As Judges we ought not to assume that we
are endowed with a divine insight into the needs of a
society. On the contrary, we should heed the warning given
by Justice Frankfurter: "As history amply proves, the judi-
63
ciary is prone to misconceive the public good by confounding
private notions with constitutional requirements".
For these reasons the challenge to the
constitutionality of section 354(5) of the Code of Criminal
Procedure fails and the writ petitions are dismissed. Orders
whereby the executions of death sentence were stayed are
hereby vacated except in W.P. (Crl.) No. 503 of 1983 which
will be listed on 27th September, 1983, for being heard on
merits. SLP (Crl.) No. 196 of 1983 is dismissed.
SABYASABHI MUKHARJI, J. I respectfully agree with the
conclusions of my learned brother, the Chief Justice. I
would like, however, to state that in the judgment, my
learned brother has observed:-
"Therefore, as soon as it is shown that the Act
invades a right guaranteed by Article 21, it is
necessary to enquire whether the State has proved that
the person has been deprived of his life or personal
liberty according to procedure established by law, that
is to say, by a procedure which is just, fair and
reasonable."
I respectfully agree that as soon as it is shown that a
Statute or Act in question invades a right guaranteed by
Article 21, it is necessary to enquire whether the State has
proved that the person has been deprived of his life or
personal liberty according to procedure established by law.
I, however, respectfully at present would not express my
opinion whether in all such cases, the State has a further
initial burden to prove that the procedure established by
law is just, fair and reasonable. With this observation, I
respectfully agree with all the other conclusions and
observations made by my brother, the learned Chief Justice.
H.L.C. Petitions dismissed.
64
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 45 of 45