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[Cites 17, Cited by 34]

Supreme Court of India

Sat Pal @ Sadhu vs State Of Haryana And Anr on 19 August, 1992

Equivalent citations: 1993 AIR 1218, 1992 SCR (3) 898, AIR 1993 SUPREME COURT 1218, 1992 (4) SCC 172, 1992 AIR SCW 3658, 1992 (3) SCR 898, 1992 (4) JT 530, 1992 (2) UJ (SC) 634, 1992 CRIAPPR(SC) 271, 1992 SCC(CRI) 866, (1993) SC CR R 103, (1994) 2 EASTCRIC 3, (1992) 2 CHANDCRIC 160, (1993) MADLW(CRI) 281, (1993) MAD LJ(CRI) 208, (1993) 1 MAHLR 676, (1992) 2 RECCRIR 503, (1992) 3 SCJ 1, (1992) 3 CURCRIR 257, (1992) 2 CRICJ 312, (1992) 3 ALLCRILR 456, (1992) 3 CRIMES 576

Author: Kuldip Singh

Bench: Kuldip Singh, K. Ramaswamy

           PETITIONER:
SAT PAL @ SADHU

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
STATE OF HARYANA AND ANR.

DATE OF JUDGMENT19/08/1992

BENCH:
KULDIP SINGH (J)
BENCH:
KULDIP SINGH (J)
RAMASWAMY, K.

CITATION:
 1993 AIR 1218		  1992 SCR  (3) 898
 1992 SCC  (4) 172	  JT 1992 (4)	530
 1992 SCALE  (2)203


ACT:
     Indian Penal Code, 1860:
     Sections 53-A, 55 and 302-Imprisonment for	 life-Nature
of-Whether  rigorous imprisonment-No formal order issued  by
appropriate  Government commuting sentence under Section  55
IPC or Section 433 (b) of the Criminal Procedure Code for  a
term not exceeding 14 years- Whether a life convict entitled
to be released before 14 years of actual imprisonment.
     Criminal Procedure Code, 1973:
     Sections  433 (b) and 433 (A)- Life  convict-Completing
13  1/2	 years actual imprisonment and total  period  of  17
years imprisonment, including remissions-Whether entitled to
be released on the ground that Government must be deemed  to
have commuted his sentence to 14 years.



HEADNOTE:
     The  petitioner, a life convict, having been  sentenced
to  undergo  imprisonment for life, for	 the  offence  under
Section 302 Indian Penal Code, filed a Writ Petition  before
this Court challenging his continued detention in jail,	 and
sought	an  order in the nature of habeas  corpus,  claiming
that  he  has  served  more than  the  maximum	sentence  of
imprisionment prescribed under law and should, therefore, be
released.   According  to the petitioner, he  had  undergone
about 13 years and six months actual imprisonment and  total
period	of  imprisonment including remissions came  to	more
than  17  years,  and since he had undergone  more  than  14
years, sentence including remissions, and the said  sentence
was  got  executed in jail custody in the form	of  rigorous
imprisonment, the Government must be deemed to have commuted
his  sentence to 14 years, either under Section	 55,  Indian
Penal  Code,  1860  or Section 433  (b),  Code	of  Criminal
Procedure,  1973,  notwithstanding that no formal  order  in
that behalf was made by the State Government and as such his
continued detention in jail was illegal and he was  entitled
to be released forthwith. It was contended that the law laid
down in Naib Singh v. State of Punjab &
						    899
     Ors.,  [1983]  2 SCC 454, needed reconsideration  by  a
larger Bench.
     Dismissing the Writ Petition, this Court.
     HELD:  1.1.  Admittedly, the petitioner's sentence	 has
not been remitted fully nor commuted for imprisonment for  a
term  not exceeding 14 years either under Section 55 of	 the
Indian Penal Code, 1860 or under Section 433 (b) of the Code
of  Criminal Procedure, 1973 by the appropriate	 Government.
Merely	because	 the petitioner has undergone 13  1/2  years
actual rigorous imprisonment and a total period of 17  years
imprisonment, including remissions, the Government cannot be
deemed	to have commuted his sentence, either under  Section
55  of the Indian Penal Code or Section 433 (b) of the	Code
of  Criminal Procedure.	 In the absence of a specific  order
in this behalf by the appropriate Government, the petitioner
is not entitled to be released.	 [900E-F, 901E]
     1.2.  It is the settled law that in view of Section 53-
A, Indian Penal Code, 1860, inserted by the Amending Act  of
1955,  the sentence of imprisonment for life imposed  on  or
after  January	1,  1956 is executable in  jails,  that	 the
nature	of  punishment	required  to  be  suffered  under  a
sentence   of	`imprisonment	for   life'   is    rigorous
imprisonment;  that since Section 53 A	(2),  transportation
for a term has been equated to rigorous imprisonment for the
same   term,  by  necessary  implication  the  sentence	  of
`transportation	 for life', now substituted by `imprisonment
for  life'  by Section 53-A(1) which is awardable  for	more
serious,  or  more grave or more heinous  crimes  must	mean
rigorous imprisonment for life, that is to say, it cannot be
anything  but rigorous; and that it is not  necessary  that,
while  passing	the  sentence of  imprisonment	for  life  a
criminal court should clarify the exact nature of punishment
intended  to be inflicted on the accused.  [902F-H,  903A-B,
901E]
     Naib Singh v. State of Punjab and others, [1983] 2	 SCC
454, relied on.
     Kishori  Lal  v.  Emperor, AIR 1945  PC  64  and  Gopal
Vinayak	 Godse	v. State of Maharashtra, [1961] 3  SCR	440,
referred to.
     1.3.   The	 reasoning  and conclusions  given  in	Naib
Singh's	 case  are  correct and there  is  no  justification
whatsoever  to	refer the points decided in that case  to  a
larger Bench.  [903F]
						   900



JUDGMENT:

CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Writ Petition (CRL.) No.1385 of 1991.

(Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India) B.S. Malik and Ashok Kumar Sharma for the petitioner. Ms. Asha and Ms. Indu Malhotra for the respondents. The Judgement of the Court was delivered by KULDIP SINGH,J. Sat Pal alias Sadhu, the petitioner, has challenged his continued detention in jail and is seeking an order in the nature of habeas corpus claiming that he has served more than the maximum sentence of imprisonment prescribed under law and should, therefore, be released.

The petitioner was arrested on March 27, 1978 in a case registered under Section 302 Indian Penal Code. He was convicted on August 16, 1978 and was sentenced to undergo imprisonment for life. According to the petitioner he has undergone about 13 years and six months actual imprisonment and total period of imprisonment including remissions comes to more than 17 years. Admittedly his sentence has not been remitted fully nor commuted for imprisonment for a term not exceeding 14 years either under Section 55 Indian Penal Code or under Section 433B Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 by the appropriate government. However, the petitioner's case is that he has undergone more than 14 years sentence including remissions and since the said sentence was got executed in jail custody in the form of rigorous imprisonment, the government must be deemed to have commuted his sentence to 14 years either under Section 55 Indian Penal Code or Section 433(B) Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 notwithstanding that no formal order in that behalf was made by the State Government and as such his continued detention in jail is illegal and he is entitled to be released forthwith. The argument has been advanced by Mr. Balwant Singh Malik, the learned counsel for the petitioner on the following grounds:-

[1] "Imprisonment for life" as one of the punishments substituted for "transportation for life" in Section 53 of the Indian Penal Code by Amending Act 26 of 1955. No corresponding amendment has been made in the Code of Criminal 901 Procedure, 1973 and there is no provision under the Code for the execution of the sentence of "imprisonment for life", In the absence of any provision for executing the sentence of "imprisonment for life" in the Code of Civil Procedure the detention of life convicts in prison is unlawful and illegal and as such the government, in order to legalise detention, has necessarily to commute life sentence under Section 55 Indian Penal Code or Section 433 (B) Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 to one of the rigorous imprisonment, which under the said provisions cannot legally exceed a terms of 14 years. The petitioner having completed 14 years, he is entitled to be released.

[II] The sentence of "life imprisonment" has not been defined either under the Indian Penal Code or under any other law. It is no where provided that a life convict has to undergo rigorous imprisonment. The Government by causing the life convicts to be dealt with as a prisoner sentence to rigorous imprisonment must be deemed to have commuted sentence of imprisonment for life to a sentence of rigorous imprisonment under Section 55 Indian Penal Code or Section 433 (B) Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 for a term not exceeding 14 years.

The arguments advanced by the learned counsel stand concluded against him by the judgement of this court in Naib Singh v. State of Punjab and others, [1983] 2 SCC 454. In the said case Naib Singh challenged his continued detention in jail on the following grounds:-

"In regard to the sentence of life imprisonment the place where it has to be executed or carried out has to be appointed under Section 32 of the Prisoners Act, 1900, and since the sentence of `imprisonment for life' like the sentence of `transportation of life' could be executed only by way of banishment or exile by the convict being `removed to the place or places' required to be appointed by the State Government under Section 32 of the Prisoners Act, the executing authorities were obliged to `execute' or `carry out' the said sentence in jail indirectly by way of commuting if for imprisonment of either description for a term not exceeding 14 years under Section 55, IPC or Section 433(b), CrPC, 1973. In other words in the 902 absence of any proper authority of law warranting the detention and execution of the sentence of such life convict in jail, his detention in such jail custody will have to be regarded as illegal and unlawful.
Nature of sentence of life imprisonment is undefined and it is not necessarily rigorous; but because the petitioner was made to undergo his sentence of life imprisonment in jail and that too in rigorous manner for more than 14 years (inclusive of remissions) his sentence should be deemed to have been commuted by the State Government either under Section 55, IPC or under Section 433 (b), CrPC, 1973 without a formal order in that behalf and he be released forthwith."

This Court rejected both the contentions and dismissed the petition. V.D. Tulzapurkar, J speaking for the Court held as under:-

Under Section 32 of the Prisoners Act a sentence of transportation either for a term or for life could be and a sentence of life imprisonment can be made executable in local jails by constituting such jails as the `places' within the meaning of Section 32 under orders of the State Governments. Apart from Section 32 of the Prisoners Act, Section 383 of CrPC, 1898 and Section 418 of CrPC, 1973 also contain the necessary legal authority and power under which a criminal court can by issuing a warrant direct the execution or carrying out of a sentence of life imprisonment in local jails. Even since the sentence of transportation either for a term or for life became executable in jails within the country and the same position must obtain in regard to persons sentenced to imprisonment for life on and after January 1, 1956 in view of Section 53-A, IPC inserted by the Amending Act 26 of 1955.

The nature of punishment required to be suffered under a sentence of `imprisonment for life' awardable on and after January 1, 1956 is rigorous imprisonment. Earlier the sentence of transportation either for life or for a term meant rigorous imprisonment in the sense of exaction of hard labour from the convict. Since under Section 53 A (2) transportation for a term has been equated to rigorous imprisonment for the same term, 903 by necessary implication the sentence of `transportation for life', now substituted by `imprisonment for life' by Section 53-A(1), which is awardable for more serious, or more grave or more heinous crimes must mean rigorous imprisonment for life, that is to say it cannot be anything but rigorous.

It is not necessary that while passing the sentence of imprisonment for life a criminal court should keep in view the provisions of Section 60, IPC and choose one or the other form so as to clarify the exact nature of punishment intended to be inflicted on the accused. A distinction between `imprisonment for life' and `imprisonment for a term' has been maintained in the Penal Code in several of its provisions. Moreover, whenever an offender is punishable with `imprisonment which may be of either description' within the meaning of Section 60 and therefore, that section would be inapplicable".

It is not disputed by the learned counsel for the petitioner that the judgement in Naib Singh's case is a complete answer to his arguments but he has vehemently argued that the said judgement needs reconsideration by a larger Bench. The learned counsel also made an attempt to challenge the correctness of the privy counsel judgement in Kishori Lal v. Emperor, AIR 1945 PC 64 and of this Court in Gopal Vinayak Godse v. State of Maharashtra, [1961] 3 SCR

440. Both these judgements have been relied upon by this Court in Naib Singh's case.

We have carefully read the judgement of this Court in Naib Singh's case and have given our thoughtful consideration to the points dealt with and decided therein. We respectfully agree with the reasoning and the conclusions reached by this Court in the said judgement. We see no justification whatsoever to refer the points decided in Naib Singh's case to a larger Bench. We , therefore, dismiss the writ petition.

N.P.V.					 Petition dismissed.
						       904