LAWS(P&H)-1983-5-61

CHARANJIT SINGH Vs. SUPERINTENDENT CENTRAL JAIL LUDHIANA

Decided On May 24, 1983
CHARANJIT SINGH Appellant
V/S
Superintendent Central Jail Ludhiana Respondents

JUDGEMENT

(1.) CHARANJIT Singh has filed this habeas corpus petition praying hat a direction be issued to the respondents to grant him parole/furlough under the Punjab Good Conduct Prisoners' (Temporary Release) Act, 1962 (hereinafter mentioned as 'the Act').

(2.) THE petitioner is undergoing life imprisonment. He applied for temporary release on parole/furlough under the Act. The Superintendent of Central Jail, Ludhiana, respondent refused to forward his application to the appropriate authority in view of his impugned order dated January 17, 1983 whereby he awarded the petitioner punishment of 12 days cutting of remission on the ground that opium was recovered from him. This order of punishment is alleged to be illegal on the plea that it was passed at the petitioner's back as he was not associated with any enquiry and no opportunity of being heard and to refuse the allegation was afforded to him. It is further contended that the impugned order is bad in law because the superintendent Jail did not obtain concurrence of the Sessions Judge.

(3.) ON hearing the arguments of the learned counsel for the parties I find that the impugned order of Superintendent, Central Jail, Ludhiana is liable to be quashed on the short ground that it was passed without judicial appraisal of the Sessions Judge in violation of mandatory directions issued by the Supreme Court in Sunil Batra v. Delhi Administration, AIR 1980 SC 1579. One of the directions issued by the Supreme Court in this case is that no punishment or denial of privileges and amenities shall be imposed upon a prisoner without judicial appraisal of the Sessions Judge and where such intimation, on account of emergency, is difficult such information shall be given within two days of the action. The same instruction was repeated by the Supreme Court in Rakesh Kaushik v. Superintendent, Central Jail, New Delhi, 1990 SC Cases (Criminal) 834, observing that the action-oriented conclusions in the case of Sunil Batra (supra) are binding on the State and need re-emphasis since dis-hard practices persist. In a later pronouncement in Kishore Singh Ravinder Dev and others v. State of Rajasthan. 1981 SCC (Crl.) 191, the Supreme Court reiterated the binding nature of the aforesaid instructions and eventually observed as follows :-