Landmark Judgments:
Article 21 clearly highlights the Founding Fathers' recognition of the State's
right to deprive a person of life and personal liberty, provided it is done in
accordance with a fair, just, and reasonable procedure established by valid law.
Several other provisions in the Constitution indicate that its framers were
fully aware of the existence of the death penalty for murder and certain other
offenses under the Indian Penal Code.
Entries 1 and 2 in the Concurrent List of the Seventh Schedule specifically
refer to the Indian Penal Code and the Code of Criminal Procedure as they were
in force at the commencement of the Constitution. Article 72(1)(c) specifically
empowers the President to suspend, remit, or commute the sentence of any person
convicted of an offense, including cases where the sentence is death.
Similarly, Article 161 grants the Governor of a State the power to suspend,
remit, or commute, inter alia, the death sentence of any person convicted of
murder or another capital offense within the State’s executive jurisdiction.
Article 134, in turn, grants a person sentenced to death by the High Court on
appeal, after a reversal of acquittal by the trial court, the right to appeal to
the Supreme Court.
Under successive Criminal Procedure Codes, in force for over a century, the
death sentence is to be carried out by hanging. Given these constitutional
provisions, it is impossible to claim that the death penalty under Section 302
of the Penal Code, either per se or due to its execution by hanging, constitutes
an unreasonable, cruel, or unusual punishment.
For the same reasons, it cannot be argued that the framers of the Constitution
regarded the death penalty for murder or its prescribed mode of execution as a
degrading punishment that would defile "the dignity of the individual" within
the meaning of the Preamble. Similarly, it cannot be said that the death penalty
for murder violates the basic structure of the Constitution.
Sections 432 and 433 of the Code of 1973 carry forward Sections 401 and 402 of
the Code of 1898, with modifications aligning them with Articles 72 and 161 of
the Constitution. Section 432 empowers the "appropriate Government" (as defined
in subsection (7) of that section) to suspend or remit sentences, while Section
433 grants the government the authority to commute a sentence without the
sentenced person’s consent. Under Clause (a) of Section 433, the government may
commute a sentence of death to any other punishment provided by the Indian Penal
Code.
Section 354(3) mandates that a court convicting a person for an offense
punishable by death, or alternatively by life imprisonment or a term of years,
should not impose the death sentence unless "special reasons" for such a
sentence are recorded. The expression "special reasons" here clearly means
"exceptional reasons" based on the exceptionally grave circumstances of the
specific case concerning both the crime and the criminal. Thus, the legislative
intent in Section 354(3) is clear: the extreme penalty should be imposed only in
the most extreme cases.
The principles guiding the application of these provisions now follow the
legislative directives in Sections 354(3) and 235(2), namely: (1) The extreme
penalty may only be imposed in the gravest cases of extreme culpability; (2) In
choosing the sentence, the court must consider not only the circumstances of the
offense but also those of the offender.
From Sections 354(3) and 235(2), as well as other related provisions of the Code
of 1973, it is evident that, in making a choice of punishment or determining the
presence or absence of "special reasons," the court must consider both the
nature of the crime and the character of the criminal.
Written By: S Kundu & Associates
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