Penology Notes
Penology Notes
Penology Notes
"the end of all penal laws is that they are not to be applied". Giving an
illustration he continued, "when a land owner puts up a notice
“trespassers will be prosecuted”; he does not want an actual trespasser
and to have the trouble and expense of setting the law into motion
against him. He hopes that the threat will render any such action
unnecessary, his aim is not to punish trespass but to prevent it. If
trespass still takes place, he undertakes prosecution. Thus, the
instrument or deterrence which he devised originally consisted in the
general threat and not in particular convictions".
The real object of the penal law therefore, is to make the threat generally
known rather than putting it occasionally into execution. This indeed
makes the preventive theory realistic and gives it humane touch. It is
effective for discouraging anti-social conduct and a better alternative to
deterrence or retribution, which now stand rejected as methods of
dealing with crime and criminals.
11.In the sentencing process, both, the crime and the criminal are
equally important. It is rather unfortunate that the sentencing
process in capital offences (murder etc.) has become ‘Judge-centric’
rather than principled sentencing. There is considerable
uncertainty on the punishment to be awarded in capital offences,
that is, whether it should be life imprisonment or death sentence.
Therefore, standardization and categorization of crimes is
necessary for rationalisation of policy of punishment.
In the instant case, deceased Seema's body was burnt by Sandeep from
below the waist with a view to destroy evidence of her having been
subjected to rape and sexual harassment as concluded by the High
Court, but the Supreme Court found no such evidence. (Sangeet & ANR.
Vs. State of Haryana, [Criminal Appeal Nos. 490-491 of 2011])
17.In operating the sentencing system, not only the rights of the
victim but also that of society deserve consideration. Law should
adopt the corrective machinery or deterrence, based on factual
matrix. Unwanted sympathy to impose inadequate sentence
would do more harm to the justice system and undermine the
public confidence in the efficacy of law. [Hazra Singh v Raj Kumar
& Others AIR 2013 SC 3273]
18.While awarding the sentence, the Judges should not get swayed by
personal opinions expressed by Judges on private form or ideas
and views expressed by jurists, academicians. Precents or binding
judgments should be guiding factor for the criminal courts to
decide cases before them examining the relevant facts and
evidence. This is all the more necessary where the case rests only
on the evidence adduced by the prosecution as well as by the
defence. The sentencing process should neither be influenced by
the “vanity of judge nor his pride of learning in other fields. He is
expected to practice the conscience of intellectual honesty and deal
with the case with all experience and humility at his command.”
[Oma alias Omprakash & Another v State of Tamil Nadu AIR 2013 SC
825]
It must be stated that these legal restrictions differ from standard forms
of punishment for criminal behaviour such as prison sentence, parole,
probation etc., that are normally meted out under the criminal justice
administration. They are created and enforced by civil law and not by
the criminal law, and are collateral in the sense that they apply to
individuals, and include sanctions or restrictions on certain types of
employment, housing, educational facility or welfare eligibility, exercise
of voting or parental rights etc. Such penalties or sanctions are mostly
attended with non-violent drug related crimes and sex offenders.
Christopher Mele and Teresa A. Miller in their book Civil Penalties and Social
Consequences state Deployment of such offenders for community service
is also treated as a technique of social policy in USA. In some States of
USA, public employment is denied to convicted felons (person who
convicts serious crime). The American criminologists and sociologists
view these collateral penalties as an attempt to intertwine systems of
criminal justice and social welfare.
1. right to vote;
2. right to hold any public office;
3. right to serve on a jury or testify in court, or enter enforceable
contract, etc.
4. right to employment or to hold licence.
In the instant case, the petitioner was undergoing a life sentence for the
offence of murder and had already undergone more than 21 years
imprisonment at the time of filing the writ petition. His contention was
that his further detention in jail was illegal and therefore, he should be
set free and also paid compensation for his alleged illegal detention
beyond the period of 20 years because the provisions of West Bengal Jail
Code and West Bengal Correctional Services Act, 1992 have equated
imprisonment for life to a term of 20 years simple imprisonment for the
purpose of remission. The petitioner also contended that life-
imprisonment being a distinct punishment from the punishment of
rigorous or simple punishment, the Government could not treat it as a
rigorous imprisonment for life. He further pleaded that prisons being
meant for intermediate custody of those who are awarded rigorous or
simple imprisonment, a life convict could not be lodged in a prison.
Disallowing the petition, the Supreme Court held that the plea that a
person convicted for imprisonment for life cannot be kept in jail is not
tenable. The Court further ruled that imprisonment for life is to be
treated as rigorous imprisonment for life and that it was unnecessary for
the Legislature to specifically say that life imprisonment means rigorous
imprisonment for life.
In yet another case, the High Court of Delhi on 20th December, 2006
awarded life imprisonment to Manu Sharma, son of Congress leader
Vinod Sharma, for murdering model Jessica Lal in 1999. Contrary to the
general perception that life sentence means 14 years' imprisonment,
Manu Sharma will spend his rest of life in jail as directed by the Court.
The Court clarified that the Supreme Court has ruled that a convict who
is awarded life sentence would be imprisoned for the rest of his life,
unless the Government passes an order remitting the sentence to
facilitate his early release.
Quoting Friedman from his Law and Changing Society, the Apex Court
in this case observed, “the State of Criminal Law continues to be a
decisive reflection of social consciousness of society.” Therefore, “in
operating sentencing system, law should adopt the corrective machinery
or deterrence based on factual matrix. Unduly lenient punishment
would lead to lawlessness and would undermine social order and lay it
in ruins. Protection of society and stamping out criminal proclivity must
be object of law, which must be achieved by imposing appropriate
sentence.”(AIR 1991 SC 1463)
The punishment to be awarded for a crime must not be irrelevant but “it
should conform to be consistent with the atrocity and brutality with
which the crime has been perpetrated, the enormity of the crime
warranting public abhorrence and it should respond to the society's cry
for justice against the criminal.”
Life imprisionment as an alternative punishment to Death sentence
The vexed question of award of death sentence to a cold-blooded
murderer or life sentence once again came up before the Supreme Court
in Swamy Shraddhananda alias Murli Manohar Mishra v. State of
Karnataka. (AIR 2008 SC 3040) The Court in this case, made it explicitly
clear that a convict punished with life imprisonment means
imprisonment till his last breath. But once the judgment is pronounced
the matter passes into the hands of the executive and is governed by
different provisions of law and there is no guarantee that the sentence
awarded to the convict by the Court after considerable deliberation
would be carried out in actuality. The remissions granted by the
executive to a life convict virtually reduces the sentence to not more than
14 years. It is a matter of serious judicial concern that the sentence of life
imprisonment awarded to the convict as a substitute for death should be
treated alike with the ordinary life imprisonment given as the sentence
of first choice.
The Apex Court in this judgment referred to the Report entitled “Lethal
Lottery, the Death Penalty in India”, compiled jointly by Amnesty
International India and Peoples’ Union for Civil Liberties, Tamil Nadu
and Pondicherry based on the Supreme Court judgments, on death
penalty from 1950 to 2006. The Report highlights the lack of uniformity
and consistency in the award of death sentence and/or its substitution
by imprisonment for life. Some of the illustrative judgments of the
Supreme Court are as follows:
In Subhash Chander v. Kishanlal and others (2001) 4SCC 458, four
accused persons including Kishanlal were convicted for multiple
murders and sentenced to death by the trial Court and the High Court
confirmed the sentence. In appeal, the Counsel for Kishanlal, on
instructions from the convict, submitted that Kishanlal, if sentenced to
life imprisonment instead of death, would never claim premature
release or commutation of his sentence on any ground i.e., under Section
401 of Cr. P.C., Prison Act, Jail Manual or other Statutes or rules meant
for the grant of remission. The Supreme Court agreed to the plea of the
Counsel and sentenced Kishanlal for imprisonment for rest of his life.
In Mohd. Munna v. Union of India (2005) 7SCC 417, the Apex Court held
that in the absence of an order of remission formally passed by the
appropriate government, there is no provision in I.P.C. or Cr. P.C. under
which a sentence of life imprisonment could be treated as for a term of
14 years or 20 years and that a life convict could not claim remission as a
matter of right.
The Court expressed its anguish for States of Bihar and Karnataka life
convicts being granted remission and released from prison on
completion of 14 years without any sound legal basis and remission is
being allowed to them in a routine manner without any sociological or
psychological, appraisal.
Having reviewed the law on award of life imprisonment as a substitute
for death, the Court in Swamy Shraddhananda case, convicted him for
life and directed that he shall not be released from prison till the rest of
his life.
It may, however be stated that most European countries have prescribed
a minimum period of incarceration after which a lifer may apply for
release on parole provided he had exhibited good behaviour during the
period he spent in prison. Thus, in Germany, the minimum time to be
spent by a person sentenced to imprisonment for life is 15 years whereas
it is ten years under the criminal law of Finland. Similar law may be
adopted in India so as to provide a humanitarian touch to the sentencing
of convicts with imprisonment for life.
Imprisonment
Imprisonment presents a most simple penal and common form of
sentencing for incapacitating the criminals. It has proved to be an
efficient method of temporary elimination of criminals apart from being
a general deterrent and an individual deterrent. Conditions of
imprisonment in civilised countries have undergone radical changes in
recent decades. The minimum security institutions such as open prisons
and prison hostels are being increasingly used as modified forms of
incarceration of offenders.
Despite being a corrective measure, the most intricate problem involved
in imprisonment as a measure of punitive reaction to crime is the
“prisonisation” of offenders. The prisoner is confronted with the most
crucial problem of adjustment to new norms and environment of prison
life. He loses his personal identity in the process of adjustment and is
converted into a mere impersonal entity.
Yet another set back of imprisonment as a mode of punishment is its
damaging effect on family relationship of the offender. The offender
loses contact with the members of his family and if he happens to be the
sole bread-winner, the consequences are still worse. The members of his
family suffer misery, starvation and financial crisis. Depriving the
offender of his family life for a considerably long period creates new
problems for prison discipline in form of homosexuality, bribery,
corruption, indiscipline, revolt etc.
In India, parole and furlough are now being extensively used as a part of
penal substitutes for mitigating the rigours of prison inmates. The All
India Jail Reforms Committee has further observed that the prisoners
should be released on furlough after undergoing a specified period of
imprisonment so that they maintain contact with their relatives and
friends and may not feel uprooted from society and prevented from the
evil effects of prisonisation.(Bhikhabhai Devshi V. State of Gujarat and
others, AIR 1987 Guj 136)
The social stigma attached to prisoners makes their rehabilitation more
difficult. Prisoners quite often feel that the real punishment begins after
they leave the prison institution. Sir Lionel Fox, the noted prison
reformist of Britain introduced Hostel system for inmates to prevent
them from stigmisation and ensure them an honourable life in society.
Be that as it may, the fact remains that imprisonment is still one of the
most accepted forms of punishment throughout the world. With the
modern correctional techniques introduced in prison institutions, it
serves as an efficient measure of reforming the criminal and at the same
time protecting the society from anti-social elements. Prisonisation of
offenders serves the dual purpose of preventive and reformative justice
at one and the same time.
Capital punishment
Of all forms of punishments, capital punishment is perhaps the most
controversial and debated subject among the modern penologists. There
are arguments for and against the utility of this mode of sentence. The
controversy is gradually being resolved with a series of judicial
pronouncements containing elaborate discussion on this complex
penological issue. (a detailed discussion on the subject is deferred to
succeeding chapter)
The offences which are punishable with death sentence under the Indian
Penal Code include: