Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SRIRANGAN
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF TAMIL NADU
DATE OF JUDGMENT30/11/1977
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
UNTWALIA, N.L.
KAILASAM, P.S.
CITATION:
1978 AIR 274 1978 SCR (2) 801
1978 SCC (1) 17
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1979 SC 916 (87)
RF 1988 SC1245 (7)
ACT:
sentence Criminal Procedure Code, 1973 (Act 11 of 1974),
Section 354(3), scope of.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant young in age and a mental case was prosecuted,
convicted and sentenced to death for the offence of triple
murders, since the testimony of dementia fell far short of
the prescription in s. 84, I.P.C. The appeal before the High
Court having failed, this Court granted Special leave
confined to the question of sentence.
Maintaining the conviction but modifying the death sentence
to one of life imprisonment, the court,
HELD : In this agonisingly sensitive area of sentencing,
especially in the choice between life term and death
penalty, a wide spectrum of circumstances attract judicial
attention since they are all inarticulately implied in the
penological part of s. 302, I.P.C., read with s. 254(3) Cr.
P.C., 1973. The plurality of factors bearing on the crime
and the doer of the crime must carefully enter the judicial
verdict. The winds of penological reform notwithstanding
the prescription in s. 302 binds and death penalty is still
permissible in the punitive Pharmacopoeia of India.
In the instant case the lesser penalty of life imprisonment
will be a more appropriate punishment. [271 A-C]
Nanu Ram v. State of Assam, A.I.R. 1975 S.C. 762 followed.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeal No. 470
of 1977.
Appeal bv Special Leave from the Judgment. and Order dated
20-4-1976 of the Madras High Court in Criminal Appeal No.
708/75 and Referred Trial No. 39/75.
V. Mayakrishnan, amicus curiae for the Appellant.
A. V. Rangam for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
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KRISHNA IYER, J.-A toddy taper, young in age and a mental
case, returning after a day-long toil with his tool, the
sickle, and tense in state, was provoked by some trivias and
went into tantrums and inflicted triple killings, all in one
sombre sunset. This bleeding tragedy led to prosecution and
conviction, appeal and confirmation, the unimpeachable
offence being murder. The defence of insanity tested by the
hoary rule in McNaghten’s case, codified in the Indian Penal
Code over hundred years ago, was rightly dismissed, the
testimony of dementia falling far short of the prescription
in section 84 I.P.C. We have discovered no error in the
factual finding and must therefore confirm the conviction.
Indeed, leave itself was granted confined to the question of
sentence.
271
The trial Judge, whose horror at the multiple homicide
unsheathed the terror of death penalty, decreed capital
sentence on the culprit, and the High Court, deeply
disturbed by "the brutal triple murder", set its seal of
approval on guilt and punishment.
In the agonisingly sensitive area of sentencing, especially
in the choice between life term and death penalty, a wide
spectrum of circumstances attracts judicial attention, since
they are all inarticulately implied in the penological part
of s. 302 I.P.C. read with s. 354(3) Cr. P.C. The plurality
of factors bearing on the crime and the doer of the crime
must carefully enter the judicial verdict. The winds of
penological reform notwithstanding, the prescription in s.
302 binds and death penalty is still permissible in the
punitive pharmacopoeia of India. Even so, the current of
precedents and the relevant catena of clement facts,
personal, social and other, persuade us to hold that, even
as in Nanu Ram v. State of Assam (A.I.R. 1975 S.C. 762), the
lesser penalty of life imprisonment win be a more
appropriate punishment here.
We set aside the death sentence and award imprisonment for
life to the appellant under s. 302 I.P.C. The appeal is
disposed of accordingly.
S.R.
Sentence reduced.
272