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Wednesday, February 14, 2024

Whether the writ petition filed by the petitioner seeking appropriate direction to the State Government, to prematurely release him, having been in custody-actual imprisonment for over 26 years, and served a sentence of over 35 years including over 8 years of remission earned, for offence punishable u/ss. 302 and 392 IPC, should be allowed. Premature release – Convict served over 26 years in actual imprisonment and served 35 years of sentence including 8 years of remission earned for offences punishable u/ss. 302 and 392 – Case rejected for premature release thrice by the State Government – Writ petition seeking direction to the State Government to prematurely release him:

[2023] 12 S.C.R. 505 : 2023 INSC 843

JOSEPH

v.

THE STATE OF KERALA & ORS.

(Writ Petition (Criminal) No(s). 520 of 2022)

SEPTEMBER 21, 2023

[S. RAVINDRA BHAT AND DIPANKAR DATTA, JJ.]

Issue for consideration: Whether the writ petition filed by the

petitioner seeking appropriate direction to the State Government,

to prematurely release him, having been in custody-actual

imprisonment for over 26 years, and served a sentence of over

35 years including over 8 years of remission earned, for offence

punishable u/ss. 302 and 392 IPC, should be allowed.

Premature release – Convict served over 26 years in actual

imprisonment and served 35 years of sentence including 8

years of remission earned for offences punishable u/ss. 302

and 392 – Case rejected for premature release thrice by the

State Government – Writ petition seeking direction to the State

Government to prematurely release him:

Held: Inflexible guidelines can result in the real danger of

overlooking the reformative potential of each individual convict –

Grouping types of convicts, based on the offences they were found

to have committed, as a starting point, may be justified, however,

prison laws in India read with Arts. 72 and 161 encapsulate a

strong underlying reformative purpose – Insistence of guidelines,

and denial to consider the real impact of prison good behavior,

and other relevant factors results in violation of Art. 14 – Excluding

the relief of premature release to prisoners who have served

extremely long periods of incarceration, not only crushes their spirit,

and instils despair, but signifies society’s resolve to be harsh and

unforgiving – Idea of rewarding, a prisoner for good conduct is

entirely negated – r. 376 of the 2014 Rules prescribes that prisoners

shall be granted remission for keeping peace and good behaviour

in jail – Redirecting the petitioner who has already undergone over

26 years of incarceration and over 35 years of punishment with

remission, to undergo, again, consideration before the Advisory

* Author

506 [2023] 12 S.C.R.

SUPREME COURT REPORT: DIGITAL

Board, and thereafter, State Government for premature release,

would be cruel – Petitioner has earned over 8 years of remission,

thus demonstrates good conduct in jail – Discussions of the Jail

Advisory Board are also positive and shows that he is a reformed

inmate – Thus, in the interest of justice, issuance of direction to

release the petitioner – Kerala Prison Rules, 1958 – Kerala Prisons

and Correctional Services (Management) Rules, 2014 – rr 462 to

468. [Paras 33-35]

Remission – Grant of remission – Scope of:

Held: Blanket exclusion of certain offences, from the scope of

grant of remission, by way of an executive policy, is arbitrary and

against the ideals of reformation that run through the criminal justice

system – Penological goal is of reformation and rehabilitation rather

than retribution – Impact of applying such an executive instruction/

guideline would be that any progress made by a long-term convict

would leave them feeling hopeless, and condemned to an indefinite

period of incarceration. [Para 28]

Remission – Remission policy – Application of:

Held: Remission policy prevailing on the date of conviction, is to

be applied in a given case, and if a more liberal policy exists on

the day of consideration, then the latter would apply. [Para 19]

Administrative law – Discretion conferred widely by plenary

statute or statutory rules:

Held: Cannot be lightly fettered. [Para 29]

State of Haryana v. Jagdish [2010] 3 SCR 716; Maru

Ram, v. Union of India [1981] 1 SCR 1196; General

Officer Commanding-in-Chief v. Subhash Chandra Yadav

[1988] 3 SCR 62; State of Haryana v. Mahender Singh

[2007] 11 SCR 932; State v. H. Nilofer Nisha (2020)

14 SCC 161:[2020] 1 SCR 456; Ramdas Athawale v.

Union of India [2010] 3 SCR 1059; Union of India v. V.

Sriharan [2015] 14 SCR 613; Swamy Shraddananda (2)

@ Mural Manohar Mishra v. State of Karnataka [2008]

11 SCR 93; State of Madhya Pradesh v. Ratan Singh

[1976] Supp. 1 SCR 552; Rajan v. The Home Secretary,

Home Department of Tamil Nadu [2019] 6 SCR 1035;

State of Haryana v. Raj Kumar (2021) 9 SCC 292; 

[2023] 12 S.C.R. 507

JOSEPH v. THE STATE OF KERALA & ORS.

Rajo v. State of Bihar Judgment dated 25.08.2023 in

Writ Petition (Crl.) No. 252/2023; State of Haryana v.

Mohinder Singh [2000] 1 SCR 698; Sangeet v. State

of Haryana [2012] 13 SCR 85; Ram Chander v. State

of Chhattisgarh [2022] 4 SCR 1103; U.P. State Road

Transport Corporation & Anr v. Mohd. Ismail & Ors.

[1991] 2 SCR 274; Chairman, All India Railway Rec.

Board & Ors. v. K. Shyam Kumar & Ors. [2010] 6 SCR

291 – referred to.

CRIMINAL ORIGINAL JURISDICTION : Writ Petition (Criminal)

No.520 of 2022

(Under Article 32 of The Constitution of India)

Adolf Mathew, Sanjay Jain, Advs. for the Petitioner.

Jaideep Gupta, Sr. Adv., Harshad V Hameed, Dileep Poolakkot,

Subhash Chandran K.R., Mrs. Ashly Harshad, Advs. for the

Respondents.

The Judgment of the Court was delivered by

S. RAVINDRA BHAT, J.

1. The petitioner, currently serving a life imprisonment sentence for a

crime committed in 1996, punishable under Sections 302 and 392 of

the Indian Penal Code (hereafter “IPC”) approaches this court seeking

to enforce his right under Article 32 of the Constitution of India. He

seeks appropriate direction to the state government, to prematurely

release him, having been in custody (i.e., actual imprisonment) for

over 26 years, and served a sentence of over 35 years (including

over 8 years of remission earned).

Facts and background

2. It was alleged that on 16.09.1994, the petitioner had gone to his

sister-in-law’s (the deceased victim) place of work, and on the false

pretext that her mother was seriously ill and had been admitted to

the hospital, taken her away with the permission of the in-charge of

the convent where she worked. The prosecution case was that he

had her walk along the railway line and at a desolate place, allegedly

raped and robbed her of the ornaments she was wearing, before

laying her on the tracks to be runover by a passing train. 

508 [2023] 12 S.C.R.

SUPREME COURT REPORT: DIGITAL

3. The petitioner was arrested on 09.10.1994 in connection with the

case and remained in custody till the trial court1 acquitted him of

all charges on 23.03.1996. The High Court2

 reversed the acquittal,

and convicted the petitioner by its judgment dated 06.01.1998 for

the offences punishable under Section 302, 376 and 392 IPC. The

High Court sentenced him to life imprisonment for the offence under

Section 302, and rigorous imprisonment of 7 years on each count

of Section 376 and 392 IPC, which were to run concurrently. This

court3

, however, on 27.04.2000 set aside the conviction under Section

376 IPC and confirmed the conviction and sentence under Sections

302 and 392 IPC only.

4. Pursuant to an order of this court, the respondent-state filed an affidavit

indicating the computation of his period of sentence undergone, the

status of his plea for remission to be granted, as well as filed the

state’s various remission policies (as amended from time to time).

The petitioner completed 1 year 5 months and 10 days of custody

as an undertrial, before his acquittal by the trial court. After his

conviction by the High Court, he surrendered to the sentence on

28.01.1998, and remained in custody thereafter. On 13.08.2010,

he completed 14 years of actual imprisonment (including the time

spent as an undertrial). And on 13.08.2016, he completed 20 years

of actual imprisonment. The custody certificate produced in his

writ petition, confirms that he completed actual imprisonment of 25

years 9 months and 26 days on 07.06.2022, (i.e., he completed 25

years actual imprisonment on 13.08.2021). However, in terms of the

state’s counter affidavit, as on 31.01.2023, he completed 25 years

10 months 3 days of actual imprisonment and has earned 8 years

4 months and 16 days in remission. Regardless of the arithmetical

inconsistencies, it is not contested that he has completed over 26

years of actual imprisonment.

5. In the course of hearing, it was pointed out that the petitioner’s case

had been considered by the Advisory Committee/Jail Advisory Board

1 By judgment dated 23.03.1996 passed by the Sessions Court, Thrissur in S.C. No. 73/1995.

2 By judgment dated 06.01.1998 passed by the Kerala High Court in Crl. A. No. 511/1996.

3 By judgment dated 27.04.2000 passed by this Court in Crl. A. No. 656/1998. 

[2023] 12 S.C.R. 509

JOSEPH v. THE STATE OF KERALA & ORS.

under prevailing Rules4

 on nine occasions of which three times,

the Board had recommended his premature release. However, the

state government had rejected his request on all three occasions.

Pursuant to a direction by this court, the State has placed on record

each of the Minutes of the Meeting/Reports of the Advisory Boards,

containing recommendations (positive and negative) relating to the

petitioner, and the rejection orders passed by the State on the three

occasions wherein the Board recommended release. These are

summarized below:

ADVISORY COMMITTEE/JAIL ADVISORY BOARD

Date & Statutory

provisions/

Rules applied

Consideration of petitioner’s case and reasoning

10.08.2011

[1958 Rules]

Petitioner’s case unanimously rejected as it was a case

of premediated murder.

27.08.2013

[1958 Rules]

Based on the police report and manner of commission

of offence, the three official members opposed

recommendation, while the three non-official members

recommended release. Committee rejected proposal.

30.06.2014

[Both 1958 and

2014 Rules]

Listed under separate heading ‘cases of prisoners who

have been convicted for offences against women but

are not premediated and thus coming under purview of

government directions’. The District Probation officer

recommended release, while the police opposed.

Recorded that he is hard working, disciplined, and

reformed and hence, Petitioner’s case was deferred to

the next meeting given that he had completed over 17

years of imprisonment.

29.09.2015

[2014 Rules]

Same observations/conclusions as last date of

consideration; petitioner’s case was unanimously

directed to be considered afresh after receiving detailed

reports from the probation officer and police and the

case was deferred for consideration till November 2015.

4 Kerala Prison Rules, 1958 (hereafter ‘1958 Rules’) and Kerala Prisons and Correctional Services

(Management) Rules, 2014 (hereafter ‘2014 Rules’). 

510 [2023] 12 S.C.R.

SUPREME COURT REPORT: DIGITAL

08.01.2016

[2014 Rules]

Petitioner’s case rejected on the ground that the police

report did not recommend release.

10.01.2017

[2014 Rules]

Police report did not recommend release, while the

reports of the probation officer and jail superintendent

respectively, supported release. After a detailed

discussion of the police report, charges levelled, and

his life inside and outside prison – probation officer and

non-official members supported release. Thereafter, the

Board unanimously recommended the petitioner’s case

for premature release.

13.08.2019

[2014 Rules]

District Probation officer recommended premature

release, while the police report again recommended

against release. Considering his life on parole, character

in prison, and period undergone, case was deferred for

consideration in next meeting.

26.02.2020

[2014 Rules]

Considering the long term imprisonment undergone, age

of convict, character in prison, family background and

situation, Petitioner’s case unanimously recommended

for release.

07.03.2022

[2014 Rules]

Petitioner’s case was discussed in detail. District Judge

on the Board, pointed out that the Supreme Court had

directed that persons who had committed murder of

women and children and those convicted under NDPS

need not be considered for release. The Chairman

also opined that those convicted for murder of women

and children, and murder with rape, ought not to be

recommended. However, a non-official member pointed

out that he had undergone over 24 years of actual

imprisonment, had been considered by the Board 5 times

and 2 times been recommended for release, and may be

given special consideration for release on humanitarian

grounds. Given his age and long incarceration,

the Petitioner’s case was thereafter recommended

unanimously for premature release.

STATE GOVERNMENT DECISION

Date of decision Government’s decision relating to the petitioner

06.07.2019 Pursuant to Advisory Board’s recommendation dated

10.01.2017, Petitioner’s case (along with the other three

convicts) was rejected without assigning any reasons.

[2023] 12 S.C.R. 511

JOSEPH v. THE STATE OF KERALA & ORS.

22.04.2021 Pursuant to Advisory Board’s recommendation dated

26.02.2020, file relating to all 20 persons recommended

for release, returned for further action.

01.09.2022 Pursuant to Advisory Board’s recommendation dated

07.03.2022, petitioner’s case (along with 7 others) was

rejected without assigning any reasons.

6. The State in its counter affidavit explained its position - that while

the petitioner has been considered for premature release 9 times,

his case has been rejected repeatedly because:

“while considering proposal for premature release of prisoners, the

consistent stand now being adopted by the Government is that

persons involved in the murder of women and children and persons

convicted in offences relating to POCSO cases shall not be granted

premature release. Since the petitioner involved in the murder of

a woman his premature release was rejected by Government in

accordance with the above stand.”

(emphasis supplied)

Further, that in 2020, general guidelines were to be framed by a specially

constituted committee5

 for determining the eligibility of prisoners with

regards to grant of premature release. This committee finally proposed

premature release of 67 convicts (from those who had earlier been rejected

for whatever reason) after assessing their individual cases. The state

government by its proceeding dated 20.04.2022, approved the proposal

excluding certain convicts who had been involved in: most cruel murder,

committed murder of woman and children, or murder with rape, and those

undergoing treatment for mental illness, whose relatives were reluctant to

receive them. These restrictions, along with other more detailed guidelines,

have been incorporated in a government order6

 dated 04.06.2022 issued

by the Home Department of the State of Kerala.

7. On 01.09.2022, the state government rejected for the third time, the

Advisory Board’s recommendation to release the petitioner. Aggrieved,

the petitioner has preferred the present writ petition.

5 This committee consisted of Additional Chief Secretary Home & Vigilance Department as Chairman, Law Secretary, and Director General of Prions and Correctional Services as Members.

6 G.O.(Ms.) NO. 116/2022/HOME dated 14.06.2022. 

512 [2023] 12 S.C.R.

SUPREME COURT REPORT: DIGITAL

Contentions of parties

8. Mr. Adolf Mathew, learned counsel appearing on behalf of the

petitioner, challenged the state government’s repeated rejection of

his plea for premature release. It was pointed out that the remission

policy prevailing on the date of the conviction would have to apply.

Attention was drawn to Rule 545A of the 1958 Rules which stipulates

release can be considered after 14 years; Rule 216(1), 244(2) and

299(c) of the 1958 Rules which state that the inmate shall be released

after completion of 20 years of sentence; and the recommendations

of the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) which prescribes

mandatory release after 25 years of sentence. Furthermore, even

in terms of Rule 377 of the new Prison Rules, 2014, the petitioner

is entitled to release after 20 years. It was argued that since the

petitioner has not only completed 14 years or 20 years, but even 25

years of actual imprisonment, at this juncture - regardless of which

rules are applied, it was manifestly illegal to keep him incarcerated

in perpetuity.

9. Mr. Mathew strongly opposed the state’s policy dated 14.06.2022 (and

executive instruction dated 20.04.2022 cited in the state’s counter

affidavit) which listed certain crimes, the commission of which put

the convict beyond the scope for grant of remission. The executive

instruction (which explicitly prohibits the release of a prisoner involved

in the “murder of a woman”), it was argued – not only came after

his completion of 25 years of incarceration, but in any case could

not override the statutory provisions. Counsel submitted that the

petitioner had a legal right to be considered for remission given the

safeguards of a convict under Articles 20 and 21 of the Constitution

of India; this legal right was guaranteed by the Prison Act, and the

Rules framed under it.

10. Relying on replies received (under the Right to Information Act, 2005)

from the respective jails in which the petitioner has been lodged –

counsel demonstrated that from 2000-2016, a total of 28 convicts

sentenced to life imprisonment, who were involved in the murder of

a woman, had been granted premature release. However, despite

being recommended three times by the Advisory Board with detailed 

[2023] 12 S.C.R. 513

JOSEPH v. THE STATE OF KERALA & ORS.

remarks on his reformation, the State government had rejected his

case for premature release without assigning any reasoning, in its

orders. This, it was argued, was grounds for setting aside these orders.

11. Lastly, counsel pointed to material produced by the respondent state

itself, to demonstrate that the Jail Advisory Board had found the

petitioner, who is aged 67 years old, to be hardworking, disciplined,

and reformed, and prayed for his premature release.

12. To supplement his submissions, counsel placed reliance on various

judgments of this court, including – State of Haryana v. Jagdish7

,

Maru Ram, v. Union of India8

, General Officer Commanding-in-Chief

v. Subhash Chandra Yadav9

, State of Haryana v. Mahender Singh10,

and State v. H. Nilofer Nisha11.

13. Mr. Jaideep Gupta, learned senior counsel, appearing on behalf of

the state, submitted that the petitioner cannot claim a fundamental

right to be released on remission, and that the prayer sought in the

writ petition – for this court’s direction to the government to release

him – was simply not maintainable.

14. Counsel argued that grant of remission, is solely at the executive’s

discretion, and an act of mercy, granted on account of good conduct

and term of imprisonment. It is not an indefeasible right; rather the

convict only has a right to be considered for remission, which he

had been, in the present case. The decision, however, of whether

to be granted remission, was an act of exercising discretion which

solely fell within the domain of the executive.

15. Mr. Gupta drew attention to the nature of the crime – that it was

premediated and cold-blooded murder, with robbery. The assault

of an innocent young woman by someone she reposed trust in,

her brother-in-law no less, who proceeded to rob her belongings

and lay her to her death in such a horrific manner, it was argued

7 [2010] 3 SCR 716

8 [1981] 1 SCR 1196

9 [1988] 3 SCR 62

10 [2007] 11 SCR 932

11 (2020) 14 SCC 161

514 [2023] 12 S.C.R.

SUPREME COURT REPORT: DIGITAL

was one which shocked the collective conscience of society. Mr.

Gupta submitted that these factors, which no doubt weighed on the

sentencing court (which did not grant the death penalty), must also

weigh on the state authority granting remission, to guide its exercise

of discretion.

16. Counsel for the State, relied on the following judgments to persuade

this court – Ramdas Athawale v. Union of India12, Union of India v.

V. Sriharan13, State of Haryana v. Mahender Singh (supra), Swamy

Shraddananda (2) @ Mural Manohar Mishra v. State of Karnataka14,

State of Madhya Pradesh v. Ratan Singh15 and Rajan v. The Home

Secretary, Home Department of Tamil Nadu16.

Analysis and conclusion

A. Applicable statutory provisions, rules, etc.

17. The Travancore-Cochin Prison Act came into force on 06.06.1950.

By virtue of Sections 3(5) and 59(4), the state government enacted

the 1958 Rules on 26.07.1958. The Kerala Prisons and Correctional

Services (Management) Act, 2010 [hereafter ‘2010 Act’] came into force

on 12/14.05.2010. By virtue of Section 102(2) of this Act (the savings

clause) the 1958 Rules were to continue till the commencement of the

new rules (i.e., the 2014 Rules), on 06/23.05.2014. On 14.06.2022,

a government order was issued containing general guidelines on

premature release, classifying prisoners such that those who had

committed certain offences could not be released prematurely, while

others, could only be considered after 25 years. This government

order also, incorporated an executive instruction dated 20.04.2022

which excluded those involved in “murder of a woman” among other

crimes, from the grant of premature release. Section 433-A of the

CrPC, is also applicable to the extent that it forecloses the option

of statutory remission until the convict who has been convicted for

12 [2010] 3 SCR 1059

13 [2015] 14 SCR 613

14 [2008] 11 SCR 93

15 [1976] Supp. 1 SCR 552

16 [2019] 6 SCR 1035

[2023] 12 S.C.R. 515

JOSEPH v. THE STATE OF KERALA & ORS.

an offence punishable by life imprisonment (or commuted death

sentence) has served 14 years of actual imprisonment.

18. Section 7717 of the 2010 Act empowers the state government to,

either suo moto or on recommendation of an Advisory Committee,

prematurely release well-behaved, long term convicted prisoners

with the objective of their better reformation and rehabilitation, as

per prescribed rules. Rule 462 to 468 of the 2014 Rules, detail the

procedure to be followed by the Advisory Committee while considering

convicts for premature release. Whenever a prisoner completes 14

years actual imprisonment, they become eligible for consideration

for premature release [ref: Rule 464(iv)18]. The Advisory Committee/

Board considers their case in detail, and make recommendations to

the state government, which is empowered under Rule 468 of the

2014 Rules, to admit or reject the said recommendations.

19. A reading of the observations of this court in State of Haryana v.

Jagdish19, which was followed in State of Haryana v. Raj Kumar20,

makes the position of law clear: the remission policy prevailing on

the date of conviction, is to be applied in a given case, and if a more

liberal policy exists on the day of consideration, then the latter would

apply. This approach was recently followed by this court in Rajo v.

State of Bihar21 as well.

20. A five-judge bench of this court, in Maru Ram, v. Union of India22,

when considering application of Section 433-A CrPC, when the trial

court had acquitted an accused prior to its insertion, but convicted

by the appellate court subsequent to Section 433-A coming into

force, held:

17 “77. Premature release. – (1) Well behaved, long term convicted prisoners may be prematurely

released with the objective of their reformation and rehabilitation, by the Government, either suo moto or on

the recommendations of an Advisory Committee as may be prescribed.

(2) The Advisory Committee constituted as per sub-section (1) shall have the powers and duties, as may be

prescribed”.

18 As per sub-clause (iv) to Rule 464 of the 2014 Rules, the Advisory Board is to consider life convicts

on completion of 10 years imprisonment (with remission), unless excluded by Section 433-A CrPC, in which

case they are to be considered after completion of 14 years actual imprisonment.

19 [2010] 3 SCR 716 [paras 35, 43].

20 (2021) 9 SCC 292 [para 16].

21 Judgment dated 25.08.2023 in Writ Petition (Crl.) No. 252/2023 [para 23].

22 [1981] 1 SCR 1196 [para 20]. 

516 [2023] 12 S.C.R.

SUPREME COURT REPORT: DIGITAL

“[…] When a person is convicted in appeal, it follows that the appellate

Court has exercised its power in the place of the original court and

the guilt, conviction and sentence must be substituted for and shall

have retroactive effect from the date of judgment of the trial Court.

The appellate conviction must relate back to the date of the trial

Court’s verdict and substitute it. In this view, even if the appellate

Court reverses an earlier acquittal rendered before Section 433-A

came into force but allows the appeal and convicts the accused, after

Section 433-A came into force, such persons will also be entitled to

the benefit of the remission system prevailing prior to Section 433-

A on the basis we have explained. An appeal is a continuation of

an appellate judgment as a replacement of the original judgment.”

21. Therefore, applying the principles laid down in the decisions discussed

above, the date of conviction, though actually on 06.01.1998 – i.e.,

the day of the High Court judgment, is deemed to relate back to the

date of the trial court judgment, which was delivered on 23.03.1996.

On this date (as was the case even in 1998 when the High Court

passed its judgment), the 1958 Rules were in force.

22. Much like the 2014 Rules [see Rule 464(iv)], the 1958 Rules similarly

entitle convicts who have completed 14 years, to be considered for

premature release. Rule 545A is extracted below:

“545A. ‘14-Year Rule’.– The cases of ** prisoners whose aggregate

sentence is more than 20 years shall be committed together with the

records specified under Rule 545 for special orders of Government

as to their premature release or completion of 14 years of sentence

including remission in each case.

** “Provided that where a sentence of imprisonment for life is

imposed on conviction of a person for an offence for which death

is one of the punishments provided by law, or where a sentence of

death imposed on a person has been committed under section 433

of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 such persons shall not be

considered for release from prison unless he has served at least 14

years of imprisonment.”

23. When it comes to date of release, the 1958 Rules also in various

provisions, fix 20 years, to be the deemed sentence for a convict

sentenced to life imprisonment: 

[2023] 12 S.C.R. 517

JOSEPH v. THE STATE OF KERALA & ORS.

“216. Date of release when two or more sentences run

consecutively.– (1) The sentence of all prisoners sentenced to

imprisonment for life or to more than 20 years imprisonment in the

aggregate, or to imprisonment, for terms exceeding in the aggregate

or to imprisonment, for terms exceeding in the aggregate 20 years

shall, for the administrative purpose of calculation of the normal date

of release be deemed to be sentence of imprisonment of 20 years….

244. Tickets to be worn by convicts. – […]

(2)(b) No other particulars, such as stars denoting health or the life

shall be entered thereon, and nothing shall be entered on the back

of the ticket. For convictions under sentence for life date of release

shall be taken as 20 years from the date of sentence. In the case of

a convict having a term of alternative imprisonment, the alternative

date of release should also be shown.

299. Definitions in these rules. – […]

(c) The sentence of all prisoners sentenced to imprisonment for life

or to more than twenty years imprisonment in the aggregate or to

imprisonment for terms exceeding in the aggregate twenty years

shall for the purpose of these rules, be deemed to be sentence of

imprisonment for twenty years.”

The analogous provision, in relation to ‘deemed’ life imprisonment sentence,

can be found in Rule 37723 of the 2014 Rules.

B. Analysing the law in the present factual matrix

24. Section 99 of the 2010 Act, empowers the state government to make

rules consistent with the Act, and sub-clause (xxxii) pertains specifically

to the authority which may recommend premature release of prisoners

under Section 77. The State government has painstakingly framed

these rules. As per Rule 462 of the 2014 Rules, Jail Advisory Boards

23 “377. Fixation of Conviction Period – (1) The sentence of all prisoners sentenced to imprisonment

for life or to more than twenty years imprisonment in the aggregate or to imprisonment for terms exceeding in

the aggregate twenty years shall for the purpose of remission rules, be deemed to be sentence of imprisonment for 20 years.

(2) A committee shall constituted under Section 72 and sub-section (1) of the Act for the computation of

remission.”

518 [2023] 12 S.C.R.

SUPREME COURT REPORT: DIGITAL

were constituted in each prison, to make recommendations for the

premature release of prisoners. The composition of these Boards

includes – Director General of Prisons and Correctional Services

as Chairman, Superintendent of Prisons as Member Secretary, and

the District Collector, District & Sessions Judge, Commissioner of

Police or District Police Chief, District Probation Officer, and three

non-official members appointed by the government – as members.

25. This diverse Board consisting of relevant stakeholders, after having

taken a holistic view of the petitioner’s case, recommended his

premature release on three different occasions – 10.01.2017,

26.02.2020, and 07.03.2022. Yet, the state government, has without

assigning any reasons – which could have perhaps demonstrated

individual consideration of each case recommended - simply rejected

the same all three times (06.07.2019, 22.04.2021, and 01.09.2022).

This is patently unsustainable and warrants intervention of this court.

26. That the execution of a sentence, is the sole prerogative of the State/

Executive, which may exercise its discretion as granted constitutionally

(Art. 161 and 72 of the Indian Constitution) and statutorily (Section

432 CrPC, and state enactments), is one that is not in question.

However, like all power – it must be exercised fairly, reasonably

and not arbitrarily.24

27. While the government order dated 04.06.2022 issued by the State of

Kerala is not directly challenged, it is this court’s considered opinion,

that it merits comment, and a note of caution. The relevant part of

the government order, is extracted below:

“I. Category of prisoners who are not be eligible for premature release.

1. Persons who are sentenced for life imprisonment for offences

against the security of the State.

2. Person who are sentenced for life for murder along with rape of

a child below 16 years of age charged with or without POCSO

Act 2012.

24 In the context of remission and sentencing, see: State of Haryana v. Mohinder Singh [2000] 1 SCR

698; Sangeet v. State of Haryana [2012] 13 SCR 85; Union of India v. V. Sriharan [2015] 14 SCR 613; Rajan

v. The Home Secretary, Home Department of Tamil Nadu [2019] 6 SCR 1035; Ram Chander v. State of

Chhattisgarh [2022] 4 SCR 1103.

[2023] 12 S.C.R. 519

JOSEPH v. THE STATE OF KERALA & ORS.

3. Persons convicted under Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic

Substances Act.

4. Persons involved in cases in which the Court expressly declares

that the prisoner shall not be granted special remission or

amnesty.

5. Persons convicted and sentenced by the courts of other States

or UTs.

II. Category of prisoners eligible only after completing 25 years of

sentence including all kinds of remission.

1. Convicts who have been imprisoned for life for murder with rape,

murder with dacoity, murder involving any offence under the

protection of Civil Rights Act 1955, murder for dowry, murder of a

child below 14 years of age, multiple murder, murder committed

after conviction while inside jail, murder during parole, murder

in terrorist incident, murder in smuggling operation. Murder of

a public servant on duty, murder with robbery and rape of child

below 14 years of age.

2. Gangsters, contract killers, smugglers, drug traffickers awarded

life imprisonment for murders.

3. Convicts whose death sentence has been commuted to life

imprisonment by Hon’ble President of India or Hon’ble Governor.

The prisoners with the following age group and completed sentence

and favourable reports from the Probation Officers are eligible under

this category:-

(a) Prisoners who have attained the age of 55 and completed

sentence of 25 years including remission; OR

(b) Prisoners who have completed 23 years of actual sentence.

III. Category of prisoners eligible after 20 years of sentence including

remission

All prisoners who do not come under category I and II shall be

eligible for premature release after 20 years of sentence including

remission irrespective of their age, but on the following conditions.

[…]”

520 [2023] 12 S.C.R.

SUPREME COURT REPORT: DIGITAL

Further, while considering the premature release of certain other

convicts recommended by the Committee, the state government

“decided to approve the proposal, excluding the following category

of prisoners:

1. Persons involved in most cruel murder.

2. Persons who committed murder of women and children, persons

who committed murder with rape.

3. Among the prisoners who are undergoing treatment for mental

illness, the prisoners whose relatives are reluctant to receive

them”.

Thus, incorporating in the general guidelines, the three excluded categories

as they appeared in the earlier executive instruction dated 20.04.2022.

28. To issue a policy directive, or guidelines, over and above the Act and

Rules framed (where the latter forms part and parcel of the former),

and undermine what they encapsulate, cannot be countenanced.

Blanket exclusion of certain offences, from the scope of grant of

remission, especially by way of an executive policy, is not only

arbitrary, but turns the ideals of reformation that run through our

criminal justice system, on its head. Numerous judgments of this

court, have elaborated on the penological goal of reformation and

rehabilitation, being the cornerstone of our criminal justice system,

rather than retribution. The impact of applying such an executive

instruction/guideline to guide the executive’s discretion would be

that routinely, any progress made by a long-term convict would be

rendered naught, leaving them feeling hopeless, and condemned

to an indefinite period of incarceration. While the sentencing courts

may, in light of this court’s majority judgment in Sriharan (supra),

now impose term sentences (in excess of 14 or 20 years) for crimes

that are specially heinous, but not reaching the level of ‘rarest of

rare’ (warranting the death penalty), the state government cannot –

especially by way of executive instruction, take on such a role, for

crimes as it deems fit. 

[2023] 12 S.C.R. 521

JOSEPH v. THE STATE OF KERALA & ORS.

29. It is a well-recognized proposition of administrative law that discretion,

conferred widely by plenary statute or statutory rules, cannot be lightly

fettered. This principle has been articulated by this court many a

time. In U.P. State Road Transport Corporation & Anr v. Mohd. Ismail

& Ors.25, this court observed:

“It may be stated that the statutory discretion cannot be fettered by

self-created rules or policy. Although it is open to an authority to

which discretion has been entrusted to lay down the norms or rules

to regulate exercise of discretion it cannot, however, deny itself the

discretion which the statute requires it to exercise in individual cases.”

30. Likewise, in Chairman, All India Railway Rec. Board & Ors. v. K.

Shyam Kumar & Ors.26 this court explained the issue, in the following

manner:

“Illegality as a ground of judicial review means that the decision

maker must understand correctly the law that regulates his decision

making powers and must give effect to it. Grounds such as acting

ultra vires, errors of law and/or fact, onerous conditions, improper

purpose, relevant and irrelevant factors, acting in bad faith, fettering

discretion, unauthorized delegation, failure to act etc., fall under the

heading “illegality”. Procedural impropriety may be due to the failure

to comply with the mandatory procedures such as breach of natural

justice, such as audi alteram partem, absence of bias, the duty to

act fairly, legitimate expectations, failure to give reasons etc.”

31. The latitude the Constitution gives to the executive, under Articles

72 and 162, in regard to matters such as remission, commutation,

etc, therefore, cannot be caged or boxed in the form of guidelines,

which are inflexible.

32. This court’s observations in State of Haryana v. Mahender Singh27

are also relevant here:

25 [1991] 2 SCR 274

26 [2010] 6 SCR 291

27 (2007) 13 SCC 606

522 [2023] 12 S.C.R.

SUPREME COURT REPORT: DIGITAL

“38. A right to be considered for remission keeping in view the

constitutional safeguards under Articles 20 and 21 of the Constitution

of India, must be held to be a legal one. Such a legal right emanates

from not only the Prisons Act but also from the Rules framed

thereunder.

39. It is now well-settled that any guidelines which do not have any

statutory flavour are merely advisory in nature. They cannot have

the force of a statute. They are subservient to the legislative act and

the statutory rules.”

(emphasis supplied)

33. Classifying - to use a better word, typecasting convicts, through

guidelines which are inflexible, based on their crime committed

in the distant past can result in the real danger of overlooking the

reformative potential of each individual convict. Grouping types of

convicts, based on the offences they were found to have committed,

as a starting point, may be justified. However, the prison laws in India

– read with Articles 72 and 161 - encapsulate a strong underlying

reformative purpose. The practical impact of a guideline, which bars

consideration of a premature release request by a convict who has

served over 20 or 25 years, based entirely on the nature of crime

committed in the distant past, would be to crush the life force out of

such individual, altogether. Thus, for instance, a 19 or 20 year old

individual convicted for a crime, which finds place in the list which bars

premature release, altogether, would mean that such person would

never see freedom, and would die within the prison walls. There is

a peculiarity of continuing to imprison one who committed a crime

years earlier who might well have changed totally since that time.

This is the condition of many people serving very long sentences.

They may have killed someone (or done something much less serious,

such as commit a narcotic drug related offences or be serving a

life sentence for other non-violent crimes) as young individuals

and remain incarcerated 20 or more years later. Regardless of the

morality of continued punishment, one may question its rationality.

The question is, what is achieved by continuing to punish a person

who recognises the wrongness of what they have done, who no 

[2023] 12 S.C.R. 523

JOSEPH v. THE STATE OF KERALA & ORS.

longer identifies with it, and who bears little resemblance to the

person they were years earlier? It is tempting to say that they are no

longer the same person. Yet, the insistence of guidelines, obdurately,

to not look beyond the red lines drawn by it and continue in denial to

consider the real impact of prison good behavior, and other relevant

factors (to ensure that such individual has been rid of the likelihood

of causing harm to society) results in violation of Article 14 of the

Constitution. Excluding the relief of premature release to prisoners

who have served extremely long periods of incarceration, not only

crushes their spirit, and instils despair, but signifies society’s resolve

to be harsh and unforgiving. The idea of rewarding, a prisoner for

good conduct is entirely negated.

34. In the petitioner’s case, the 1958 Rules are clear – a life sentence,

is deemed to be 20 years of incarceration. After this, the prisoner

is entitled to premature release.28 The guidelines issued by the

NHRC pointed out to us by the counsel for the petitioner, are also

relevant to consider – that of mandating release, after serving

25 years as sentence (even in heinous crimes). At this juncture,

redirecting the petitioner who has already undergone over 26 years

of incarceration (and over 35 years of punishment with remission),

before us to undergo, yet again, consideration before the Advisory

Board, and thereafter, the state government for premature release

– would be a cruel outcome, like being granted only a salve to

fight a raging fire, in the name of procedure. The grand vision

of the rule of law and the idea of fairness is then swept away, at

the altar of procedure - which this court has repeatedly held to

be a “handmaiden of justice”.

35. Rule 376 of the 2014 Rules prescribes that prisoners shall be

granted remission for keeping peace and good behaviour in jail. As

per the records produced by the State, the petitioner has earned

over 8 years of remission, thus demonstrating his good conduct

in jail. The discussions in the minutes of the meetings of the Jail

28 See also this court’s order dated 11.10.2018 in Criminal Appeal No. 276-278/2010. 

524 [2023] 12 S.C.R.

SUPREME COURT REPORT: DIGITAL

Advisory Board are also positive and find that he is hardworking,

disciplined, and a reformed inmate. Therefore, in the interest of

justice, this court is of the opinion, that it would be appropriate

to direct the release of the petitioner, with immediate effect. It is

ordered accordingly.

36. The writ petition, thus, stands allowed in the above terms. Pending

applications, if any, are disposed of.

Headnotes prepared by: Nidhi Jain Result of the case: Writ petition allowed.