Probation of Offender Act, 1958 - Ipleaders
Probation of Offender Act, 1958 - Ipleaders
Probation of Offender Act, 1958 - Ipleaders
Table of Contents
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1. Introduction
2. Scope and Background
3. Aim and Objective of Probation
4. Statutory provisions under the Act
4.1. Admonition
4.1.1. Case laws
4.2. Probation on good conduct
4.2.1. Case laws
4.3. Cost and compensation
4.3.1. Case laws
4.4. Offenders under 21 years of age
4.4.1. Case laws
4.5. Report of probation officers
5. Salient features of the Act
6. The offence for which probation cannot be granted under the
Act
7. Pit-falls in Probation System in India
8. Conclusion
9. References
Introduction
“Hate the crime and not the criminal”. You might have heard
this a zillion times. This means that we need to eliminate crime
and for this the elimination of criminals is not required. The
Criminal Law in India is more into reforming offenders rather
than punishing them. It is true that punishment gives a sense
of satisfaction to the society as well as to the victim, but this
does not reform the criminals. Especially in the cases of
imprisonment, once the person is out of prison, he is back to
his old ways of infringement of rights. This is common in the
cases of youth criminals. Their minds are not mature and get
diverted when engaged with several criminals in jail.
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good behaviour. The court can also grant a supervision period
for the accused. The main aim behind the Probation of Offender
Act, 1958 is to give an opportunity to offenders to reform
themselves rather than turning into hardened criminals.
Section 562 of the Code of Criminal Procedure,1898 (after
amendment it stands as Section 360 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure, 1973) provides that any person not below twenty-
one years of age who may have not been convicted for an
offence for imprisonment up to seven years or not convicted to
death or imprisonment of life can be released on the basis of
probation for good conduct.
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to provide the offenders with an opportunity to prove that they
can improve their behaviour and can live in a society without
harming them.
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probation because of their good conduct. The extent of
arrangements of probation law was expanded further by the
enactment in 1923 resulting in the Indian Jails Committees
Report (1919-1920). In 1931 the Government of India
arranged a Draft Probation of Wrongdoers Bill and flowed it to
the then Provincial governments for their perspectives.
The Indian system says that the judiciary should solely vest in
the probationary laws. This is so because the power of
probation will be vested upon the voluntary and extrajudicial
agencies which lack judicial methods and techniques. This
would create a serious problem as these organisations will have
their own values and considerations. Sociologists and
psychologists will be concerned only upon the reformations of
the offender and not the legal implication of the reformative
measure. Probation is subjected to judicial review under Article
226 of the Indian Constitution which will eventually allow the
judges to bring it under judicial scrutiny.
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Aim and Objective of Probation
The main aim and objective of probation is to permanently
reform the lawbreakers. It involves moulding the habits into
constructive ways by rehabilitation and reformation. The
objective is to give a chance to the anti-social person to
willingly cooperate with society. This will also give him social
protection and security. It is a substitution for imprisonment.
Imprisonment will not always serve the purpose of eliminating
crime. The object of Probation Law is more to reform the
offender than to punish him. This is what we generally call
Probation. Simply, it can be understood as the conditional
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release of an offender on the promise of good behaviour.
The aim of this Section was to reform the young offender who
might have committed the crime under the influence of bad
company or ignorance. The object is to remould and save them
from the hardened criminals who might distract them to the
path of crimes. This Section also helps the persons of mature
age who may have committed the crime in influence. They are
expected to be good citizens of the country.
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The court might release him on entering the bond for good
conduct and peace instead of punishing the offender with
imprisonment. In this case of Jugal Kishore Prasad v. The State
of Bihar, the Supreme Court stated that the aim of the law is to
deter the juvenile offenders from turning into obdurate
criminals as a result of their interaction with seasoned mature-
age criminals in case the juvenile offenders are sentenced to
incarceration in jail. It is observed that the Act is in accordance
with the present trend of penology, which says that effect
should be made with accordance to change and remould the
offender and not to retribute justice. Modern criminal
jurisprudence recognises that no one is born criminal. A good
number of crimes are a result of a socio-economic
environment.
Admonition
Section 3 of the Probation of the Offenders Act,1958 deals with
the power of court to release the offender after admonition. An
Admonition, in literal terms, means a firm warning or
reprimand. Section 3 says how the offender is benefited on the
basis of admonition after satisfying the following conditions:
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When any person is found guilty of committing an offence
under Section 379 or Section 380 or Section 381 or Section
404 or Section 420 of the Indian Penal Code,1860 or any
offence punishable with imprisonment for not more than two
years, or with fine, or with both, under the Indian Penal
Code, or any other law
Case laws
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1. Keshav Sitaram Sali v. The State of Maharashtra, AIR 1983
SC 291 – In this case, the appellant was an employee of the
Railways at the Paldhi Railway Station. He abetted the
execution of a charcoal theft crime committed by Bhikan
Murad in the case before the Special Judicial Magistrate First
Class (Railways), Bhusawal, on the charges of charcoal
stealing. The learned Magistrate acquitted the appellant of
that crime, and the State Government filed an appeal before
the Bombay High Court against the acquittal judgment
passed by the learned Magistrate. He was charged with a fine
of Rs. 500 and in default of payment, rigorous imprisonment
for two months. The subject matter of theft was a quantity of
coal valued at Rs. 8. The Supreme Court held that in case of
minor thefts, the High Court should extend the benefit of
Section 3 or Section 4 of the Probation of Offenders Act,1958
or Section 360 of the Code of Criminal Procedure,1973 rather
than imposing fines.
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It is a very important Section of the Act. The important points
that must be remembered for the application of this Section
are:
Case laws
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1. Smt. Devki v. The State of Haryana, AIR 1979 SC 1948 – In
this case, it was observed that Section 4 would not be
extended to the abominable culprit who was found guilty of
abducting a teenage girl and forcing her to sexual submission
with a commercial motive.
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Case laws
1. Rajeshwari Prasad v. Ram Babu Gupta, AIR 1961 Pat 19 –
The amount of compensation is purely on the discretion of
the court to grant if it thinks it is reasonable in the case.
Thus, deciding the amount of compensation, it is solely the
court’s discretion to require payment and costs where it
finds.
Click Above
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In cases where the accused is below 21 years of age, the
Court shall call for the report of the Probation Officer. If the
court’s opinion is not desirable with offender either on the
ground of admonition (Section 3) or on the ground of release
on probation of good conduct (Section 4), the Court can pass
sentence of imprisonment on the offender who is under 21 of
years ago but the Court cannot sentence him without
recording reasons for doing so. The Court has an obligation
to see whether Section 3 or 4 of the Act applies or not. For
this purpose, the Court must call for the report of the
Probation Officer. Therefore, the report of the Probation
Officer is mandatory when the offender is under 21 years of
age.
Case laws
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1. Daulat Ram v. The State of Haryana 1972 SC 2434 – In this
case, it was held that the aim of this Section was to protect
the youth. The juvenile offenders would not be sent to jail if
their crime was not as serious as to punish them with life
imprisonment or death. Therefore, the provision should be
liberally construed keeping in view the spirit embodied
therein.
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Salient features of the Act
The most important salient feature of the act is
5. The Act gives the Judge the right to modify the terms of the
bail after a prisoner is placed on probation with good
behaviour and to prolong the probation period not to exceed
three years from the date of the initial order.
6. The Act offers extra protection for people under the age of
twenty-one to prevent sentencing him to prison. However, a
person found guilty of a crime punishable by life
imprisonment can not have this clause.
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7. The Act empowers the Court to grant a warrant of arrest or
summons to him and his guarantees compelling them to
appear before the Court on the date and time stated in the
summons if the defendant placed on bail refuses to comply
with the terms of the bond.
8. Under the terms of this Act, the Act empowers the Judge to
try and sentence the defendant to jail. The High Court or any
other Court may even make such an order when the case is
put before it on appeal or in revision.
10. The Act applies to India as a whole except for Jammu State
and Kashmir. This Act shall come into force in a State on
such date as the Government of the State may designate, by
notice in the Official Gazette. It also gives state governments
the right to put the Act into force on multiple dates in
different parts of the State.
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Section 409, 467 and 471 of the Indian Penal Code – these
Sections deal with breach of trust by public servants, forgery
of valuable security and will and documents used as a
genuine forgery. In Rev vs By Adv. Sri P.K.Ravisankar and
State Of Gujarat vs V.A. Chauhan, on 3 February 1983, the
court did not grant release of the offenders on the basis of
Section 3 and Section 4 of the Probation of the Offenders
Act,1958.
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State of Sikkim v. Dorjee Sherpa And Ors– In some cases,
the Court does not take technical views and should take into
account certain considerations, such as the risk of work
losses, to invoke the provisions of the Probation of Offenders
Act even in serious offences. This was also argued that the
Court would also take into account that convicts belonging to
middle-class families with no criminal record frequently
become victims of situations due to the unwelcome business
and other negative forces available to these young
generations.
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1. It is difficult in many situations to determine whether the
criminal is a first offender or a recidivist. There is, therefore,
a possibility that an offender who is otherwise recurrent may
be admitted to probation and may not react favourably to
this technique of correction.
3. Section 6 of the Act allows the court to take into account the
report of the probation officer when it is appropriate to take
a decision to grant or deny probation to an offender under
the age of 21, but many times court decisions are made
without any report. Again, this goes against the spirit of
morality that is enshrined in the Probation Act. This is
basically because of the poor judiciary system.
Conclusion
The benefit of probation can be usefully applied to cases where
persons on account of family discord, destitution, loss of near
relatives, or other causes of like nature, attempt to put an end
to their own lives. Its aim is to reform the offender and to
make him see the right path.It would be of great help to a
country like India where the prisons are always overcrowded,
with regular abuses of human rights that will harden a person’s
inside. Probation is the divine affirmation inside every being
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and it has to be given importance.
References
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