17 August 1976
Supreme Court
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SANTA SINGH Vs STATE OF PUNJAB

Bench: BHAGWATI,P.N.
Case number: Appeal Criminal 123 of 1955


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PETITIONER: SANTA SINGH

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: STATE OF PUNJAB

DATE OF JUDGMENT17/08/1976

BENCH: BHAGWATI, P.N. BENCH: BHAGWATI, P.N. FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA

CITATION:  1976 AIR 2386            1977 SCR  (1) 229  1979 SCC  (4) 190  CITATOR INFO :  RF         1977 SC 949  (5,23)  F          1977 SC1066  (29)  D          1977 SC1579  (89)  RF         1977 SC1747  (4)  RF         1977 SC1926  (16)  R          1980 SC 898  (152)  RF         1989 SC1247  (16)  F          1991 SC 345  (7)

ACT:         Code  of  Criminal Procedure (Act 2 of 1974),  ss.  235  and         465--Scope of

HEADNOTE:             The appellant was convicted by the Sessions Court  under         s.  302,  IPC, and sentenced to death.  On the date  of  the         judgment  his advocate was not present. The trial court  did         not  give the accused an opportunity to be. heard in  regard         to  the  sentence as required by s. 235(2),  Cr.P.C.,  1973.         The appellant also did not insist on his right to be  heard.         The  conviction and sentence.  were, confirmed by  the  High         Court.  Even in the High Court the accused did not  complain         that the trial court had committed a breach of s. 235(2).             On the question whether the sentence is vitiated because         of the violation .of s. 235(2),             HELD: The matter should be remanded to. the trial  court         for  giving an opportunity to the appellant on the  question         of sentence.             Per Bhagwati, J: (1) Under s. 235(1) the court must,  in         the first instance, deliver a judgment convicting or acquit-         ting the accused.  If the accused  is acquitted, no  further         question  arises.   If  the accused is  convicted,  at  that         stage, he must be given an opportunity to be heard in regard         to  the sentence, and it is only after hearing him that  the         court can pass sentence.  [232 D-E]             (2) Section 235(2) is a new provision in consonance with         the  modern  trends in penology and  sentencing  procedures.         Sentencing is an important stage in the process of  adminis-         tration of criminal justice, and should not be consigned  to         a  subsidiary position.  Many factors have to be  considered         before a proper sentence is passed such as the nature of the         offence;  the  circumstances-extenuating or  aggravating--of

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       the  offence;  the  prior criminal record, if  any,  of  the         offender; his age; his record of employment; his  background         with reference to education; home life. sobriety and  social         adjustment;  his  emotional and mental condition; the  pros-         pects for his rehabilitation; the possibility of  his return         to a normal life in the community; the possibility of treat-         ment  or training Of the offender; the possibility that  the         sentence  may Serve as a deterrent to crime by the  offender         or  by others and the current community need,  if   any  for         such  a deterrent in respect to the particular type  of  of-         fence.  The material relating to these factors may be placed         before the court by means of affidavits. The hearing contem-         plated  by s. 235(2) is not confined merely to hearing  oral         submissions, but .it is also intended to give an opportunity         to  the  prosecution and the accused to  place.  before  the         court  facts  and material relating to the  various  factors         bearing   on the question of sentence, and if they are  con-         tested  by the other side, then to produce evidence for  the         purpose  of  establishing  those  factors.   Otherwise,  the         hearing  would be devoid of meaning and content.  The  Court         must  however  be vigilant to see that this hearing  on  the         question  of sentence is not abused and turned into  an  in-         strument  for unduly protracting 1he proceedings. [232 E;  G         233 F; 235 A-B]         Ediga Anammo v. State of Andhra Pradesh [1974] 3 S.C.R.  329         referred to.             (3)  If the trial court had, instead of  sentencing  the         appellant   to   death, imposed on him the sentence  of  the         imprisonment, he would not be, aggrieved by the breach of s.         235(2  ),  because, even after hearing the  appellant,  the.         trial  court  could not have passed a more  favourable  sen-         tence.   But the trial court imposed death sentence and  the         possibility cannot be ruled out that if the         230         appellant has been given an opportunity to produce  material         and  make submissions on the question of sentence, he  might         have  been able to persuade, the trial court to  impose  the         lesser penalty. [235 D-E]             (4)  Since  the section is a new provision it  is  quite         possible  that many lawyers and judges might be  unaware  of         it.   In the present case obviously the trial court as  well         as the appellant’s advocate in the High Court were aware  of         it.   No  inference  can, therefore, be  drawn  against  the         appellant  that he had nothing to say from his  omission  to         raise this point in  the  High Court. [236 A]             (5)(a)  Non-compliance with the requirement of the  sec-         tion   cannot  be described as a mere  irregularity  curable         under  s. 465.  It amounts to by_passing an important  stage         of  the  trial so that the trial cannot be said to  be  that         contemplated by the Code.  Such deviation constitutes  diso-         bedience of an express provision of the Code as to the  mode         of trial and hence cannot be regarded as a mere  irregulari-         ty. [236 H]         Subramania Iyer v. King Emperor (1901) 28 I.A. 257  referred         to.             (b)  The; violation goes to the root of the  matter  and         the  resulting  illegality is of such a  character  that  it         vitiates the sentence. [237 B]             Pulukuri Kotayya v. King Emperor, (1947) 74 I.A. 65  and         Magga v. State of Rajasthan, [1953] S.C.R. 973 referred to.             (c) When no opportunity has been given to the  appellant         in  regard to the sentence to be imposed on him, failure  of         justice must be regarded as implicit and s. 465 cannot  have         any application. [137 B]             Per Fazal Ali J. (1) The 48th Report of the Law  Commis-

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       sion  and the statement of objects and reasons of the  1973-         Code  of  Criminal Procedure show that s. 235(2) is  a  very         salutary  provision.  It contains one of the  cardinal  fea-         tures  of natural justice, namely, that the accused must  be         given  an opportunity to make a representation  against  the         sentence proposed to be imposed on him.  It seeks to achieve         a  socio-econonmic  purpose and is aimed  at  attaining  the         ideal  principle  of  proper sentencing in  a  rational  and         progressive society. Section 235 is split up into two  inte-         gral parts, (a) the stage which culminates in the passing of         the  judgment of conviction or acquittal; and (b) the  stage         which,  on conviction, results in imposition of sentence  on         the  accused.  Both these parts are  absolutely  fundamental         and non-compliance with any of the provisions would undoubt-         edly  vitiate the final order passed by the Court.   Section         235(2) enjoins on the Court to stay its hands after  passing         a  judgment oF conviction and hear the accused on the  ques-         tion  of sentence before  passing sentence.  [238 H; 239  E;         C]             (2) There may lye a number of circumstances of which the         Court may not be aware but which may be taken into consider-         ation by the court while awarding the sentence, particularly         a sentence of death.  The accused must be given an  opportu-         nity of making his representation and placing such materials         which  have a bearing on the question of sentence.   Parlia-         ment has not intended that the accused should adopt dilatory         tactics  under the cover of this new provision  but  contem-         plated  that a short and simple opportunity has to be  given         to   the accused to place materials bearing on the  question         of  sentence,  if  necessary  by  leading  evidence,  before         the .Court, and a consequent opportunity to the  prosecution         to  rebut  those materials.  The Court must be  vigilant  to         exercise  proper  control over the proceedings so  that  the         trial is not unavoidably or unnecessarily delayed.  [240  F-         G]             (3) Non-compliance with the section is not a mere irreg-         ularity which can be cured by s. 465 of the Code.  It is  an         illegality which vitiates the sentence. Having regard-to the         object  and the setting in which the new provision  was  in-         serted,  there  can be no doubt that it is one of  the  most         fundamental  parts of criminal procedure and  non-compliance         thereof will ex facie vitiate the order.         231         Even  if  it be regarded as an  irregularity  the  prejudice         caused to the accused would be inherent and implicit because         of the infraction of the rules of natural justice which have         been  incorporated in this provision, since the accused  has         been  completely deprived of an opportunity to represent  to         the Court regarding the proposed sentence and this manifest-         ly results in a  serious  failure   of justice. [240 B-C]             [Both the learned Judges indicated that there must be  a         system  of training judges in the application of  socio-eco-         nomic   laws  and  in  modern  methods  and  techniques   of         decision-making and sentencing procedures]

JUDGMENT:             CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 230         of 1976.             (Appeal  by  Special Leave from the Judgment  and  order         dated  11.9.1975 of the Punjab & Haryana High Court in  Crl.         Appeal No. 392 of .1975 and Murder Reference No. 14/75).         S.K. lain, for the Appellant.         O.P. Sharma, for the Respondent.

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                                        Judgment         The Judgment of the Court was delivered by         P.N.  Bhagwati, J.S. Murtaza Fazal Ali, J. gave  a  separate         Opinion.             BHAGWATI,  J.--This appeal, by special leave, raises  an         interesting question of law relating to the construction  of         section 235(2) of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973.  The         appellant  was  tried before the  Sessions  Judge,  Ludhiana         for.committing  a double murder, one of his mother  and  the         other of her second husband.  He was represented by a lawyer         during  the trial and after the evidence was  concluded  and         the  arguments  were heard, the learned Sessions  Judge  ad-         journed the case to 13th February, 1975 for pronouncing  the         judgment.   It  appears  that on 13th  February,  1975,  the         judgment  was not ready and hence the case was adjourned  to         20th  February, 1975 and again to 26th February, 1975.   The         Roznamcha  of the proceedings shows that on  26th  February,         1975  the appellant was present without his lawyer  and  the         learned  Sessions Judge pronounced the  judgment  convicting         the appellant of the offence under section 302 of the Indian         Penal Code and sentenced him to death.  It was common ground         that  after pronouncing the judgment convicting  the  appel-         lant, the learned Sessions Judge did not give the  appellant         an  opportunity to be heard in regard to the sentence to  be         imposed  on  him and by one single judgment,  convicted  the         appellant  and also sentenced him to death.   The  appellant         preferred an appeal to the High Court and the case  was also         referred  to  the High Court for confirmation of  the  death         sentence.  The High Court agreed with the view taken by  the         learned Sessions Judge and confirmed the conviction as  also         the sentence of death. The appellant thereupon preferred the         present appeal with special leave obtained from this Court.             The  appeal is limited to the question of  sentence  and         the  principal argument advanced on behalf of the  appellant         is that in not giving an opportunity to the appellant to  be         heard in regard to the sentence to         232         be imposed on him after the judgment was pronounced convict-         ing  him, the learned Sessions Judge committed a  breach  of         section 235 (2) of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973  and         that  vitiated the sentence of death imposed on  the  appel-         lant.   This argument is a substantial one and it  rests  on         the  true interpretation of section 235(2).   This is a  new         provision and it occurs in section 235 of the Code of Crimi-         nal Procedure, 1973 which reads as follows:                          "235  (,1)  After  hearing  arguments   and                  points  of  law (if any), the Judge  shall  give  a                  judgment in the case.                         (2)  If the accused is convicted, the  Judge                  shall,  unless he proceeds in accordance  with  the                  provisions of section 360, hear the accused on  the                  question of sentence, and then pass sentence on him                  according to law."              This provision is clear and explicit and does not admit         of any doubt. It requires that in every trial before a court         of sessions, there must first be a decision as to the  guilt         of  the  accused.  The court must, in  the  first  instance,         deliver  a judgment convicting or acquitting   the  accused.         If  the accused is acquitted, no further  question   arises.         But  if  he is convicted, then the court has  to  "hear  the         accused on the question of sentence, and then pass  sentence         on  him  according  to law".   When a judgment  is  rendered         convicting the accused, he is, at that stage, to be given an         opportunity to be heard in regard to the sentence and it’ is         only  after hearing him that the court can proceed  to  pass

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       the sentence.             This  new provision in section 235(2) is  in  consonance         with  the  modern trends in penology and  sentencing  proce-         dures.  There was no such provision in the old Code.   Under         the  old  Code,  whatever the accused wished  to  submit  in         regard  to the sentence had to be stated by him  before  the         arguments  concluded and the judgment was delivered.   There         was no separate stage for being heard in regard to sentence.         The accused had to produce material and make his submissions         in  regard to sentence on the assumption that he  was  ulti-         mately going to  be convicted.  This was most  unsatisfacto-         ry.   The legislature,   therefore, decided that it is  only         when the accused is convicted that  the question of sentence         should  come  up  for consideration and at  that  stage,  an         opportunity  should be given to the accused to be  heard  in         regard  to  the sentence.  Moreover, it was  ’realised  that         sentencing. is an important stage in the process of adminis-         tration  of  criminal justice as important as the  adjudica-         tion of guilt--and it should not be consigned to a  subsidi-         ary position as if it were a matter of not much consequence.         It should be a matter of some anxiety to the court to impose         an  appropriate  punishment on the criminal  and  sentencing         should,  therefore, receive serious attention of the  court.         In  most of the countries of the world, the problem of  sen-         tencing the criminal offender is receiving increasing atten-         tion  and  that is largely because of the  rapidly  changing         attitude  towards crime and criminal.  There is in  many  of         the countries, intensive study of the sociology of crime         233         and that has shifted the focus from the crime to the  crimi-         nal,  leading to a widening of the objectives of  sentencing         and, simultaneously, of the range of sentencing  procedures.         Today,  more  than  ever before, sentencing  is  becoming  a         delicate task, requiring an inter-disciplinary approach  and         calling  for  skills and talents vary  much  different  from         those ordinarily expected of lawyers.  This was pointed  out         in clear and emphatic words by Mr. Justice Frankfurter:                       "I myself think that the bench  we lawyers who                  become  judges--are  not very  competent,  are  not                  qualified  by    experience,  to  impose  sentences                  where  any discretion is to be   exercised.   I  d9                  not  think it is in the domain of the  training  of                  lawyers to know what to do with a fellow after  you                  find  out  he  is a thief.  I do  not  think  legal                  training  gives  you any  special  competence.   I,                  myself,  hope that one of these   days, and  before                  long,  we  will divide the  functions  of  criminal                  justice.   I think the lawyers are people  who  are                  competent  to ascertain whether or not a crime  has                  been  committed.   The  whole  scheme   of   common                  law   judicial   machinery--the rule  of  evidence,                  the  ascertainment of what is relevant and what  is                  irrelevant and what is fair, the whole  question of                  whether you can introduce prior crimes in order  to                  prove intent--I think lawyers are peculiarly fitted                  for  that task.  But all the questions that  follow                  upon  ascertainment of guilt, I think require  very                  different  and much more diversified  talents  than                  the  lawyers  and  judges are  normally  likely  to                  posses."                  The reason is that a proper sentence is the amalgam                  of many  factors such as the nature of the offence,                  the circumstances--extenuating  or  aggravating--of                  the offence, the prior criminal record’, if any, of                  the  offender, the age of the offender, the  record

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                of the offender  as  to employment, the  background                  of  the offender with reference to education,  home                  life, society and social adjustment, the  emotional                  and mental condition of the offender, the prospects                  for the rehabilitation of the offender, the  possi-                  bility  of return of the offender to a normal  life                  in  the community, the possibility of treatment  or                  training of the offender, the possibility that  the                  sentence  may serve as a deterrent to crime by  the                  offender  or  by others and the  current  community                  need,  if any, for such a deterrent in  respect  to                  the particular type of offence.  These are  factors                  which have to be taken into account by the court in                  deciding upon the appropriate sentence, and  there-                  fore, the legislature felt that, for this  purpose,                  a  separate stage should be provided after  convic-                  tion when the court can bear the accused in  regard                  to these factors bearing on sentence and then  pass                  proper  sentence  on the accused.   Hence  the  new                  provision in section 235(2).             But, on the interpretation of section  235(2),   another         question arises and that is, what is the meaning and content         of  the  words "hear the accused".  Does it mean merely that         the  accused  has  to be given an opportunity  to  make  his         submissions or he can also produce         17--1003 SCI/76         234         material  bearing  on  sentence which has so  far  not  come         before  the Court? Can he lead further evidence relating  to         the  question of sentence or is the hearing to  be  confined         only to. oral  submissions ? That depends on the interpreta-         tion to be placed on the word ’hear’. ’Now, the word  ’hear’         has no fixed rigid connotation.  It  can  bear either of the         two  rival  meanings depending on the context  in  which  it         occurs.   It is a well settled rule of interpretation,  hal-         lowed by  time and sanctified by authority, that the meaning         of  an  ordinary word is to be found not so much  in  strict         etymological propriety of language, nor even in popular use,         as  in the subject or occasion on which it is used  and  the         object which is intended to be attained. It was Mr.  Justice         Holmes who pointed out in his inimitable style that "a  word         is not a crystal, transparent and unchanged: it is the  skin         of  a  living  thought and may vary greatly  in  colour  and         content according to the circumstances and the time in which         it  is used".  Here, in this provision, the word ’hear’  has         been used to give an  opportunity  to  the accused to  place         before  the court various circumstances bearing on the  sen-         tence to be passed against him.  Modern penology, as pointed         out  by  this Court in Ediga Annamma v.  State   of   Andhra         Pradesh(1)’ "regards crime and criminal as equally  material         when the right sentence has to be picked out".  It turns the         focus not only on the crime, but  also  on the  criminal and         seeks  to personalise the punishment so that  the  reformist         component is as much operative as the deterrent element.  It         is  necessary for this purpose that "facts of a  social  and         personal  nature,  sometimes altogether irrelevant,  if  not         injurious, at the stage of fixing the guilt, may have to  be         brought to the notice of the court when the actual  sentence         is  determined".   We have set out large number  of  factors         which  go  into  the alchemy which  ultimately  produces  an         appropriate sentence and full and adequate material relating         to  these factors would have to be brought before the  court         in  order  to enable the court to pass an  appropriate  sen-         tence.   This  material may be placed before  the  court  by         means  of affidavits, but if either party disputes the  cor-

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       rectness  or veracity of the material sought to be  produced         by  the other, an opportunity would have to be given to  the         party concerned to lead evidence for the purpose of   bring-         ing   such material on record.  The hearing on the  question         of  sentence,  would be rendered devoid of all  meaning  and         content  and it would become an idle formality, if  it  were         confined  merely  to hearing oral  submissions  without  any         opportunity  being given to the parties and particularly  to         the  accused, to produce material in regard to various  fac-         tors beating on the question of sentence, and if  necessary,         to  lead evidence for the purpose of placing  such  material         before  the court.  This was also the opinion  expressed  by         the  Law Commission in its Forty Eighth Report where it  was         stated  that  "the taking of evidence as   to   the  circum-         stances relevant to sentencing should be encouraged and both         the prosecution and the accused should be allowed to cooper-         ate in the process."  The Law Commission strongly recommend-         ed that  ’if  a request is made in that behalf bY either the         prosecution  or  the  accused, an  opportunity  for  leading         "evidence on the question"  of  sentence "should be  given".         We are, therefore, of the view that the hearing.         (1) [1974] 3 S.C.R. 329.         235         contemplated  by  section 235(2) is not confined  merely  to         hearing oral submissions, but it is also intended to give an         opportunity  to  the prosecution and the  accused  to  place         before  the  court  facts  and material relating to  various         factors beating on the question of sentence and if they  are         contested  by either side, then to produce evidence for  the         purpose  of  establishing the same.  Of course,  care  would         have  to be taken by the court to see that this  hearing  on         the  question of sentence is not abused and turned  into  an         instrument  for  unduly protracting  the  proceedings.   The         claim of due and proper hearing would have to be  harmonised         with the requirement of expeditious disposal of proceedings.             Now  there can be no doubt that in the present case  the         requirement  of section 235(2) was not complied with,  inas-         much  as  no opportunity Was given to the  appellant,  after         recording  his  conviction,  to produce  material  and  make         submissions in regard to the sentence to be imposed on  him.         Since the appellant was. convicted under section 302 of  the         Indian  Penal Code, only two options were available  to  the         Sessions  Court in the matter of sentencing  the  appellant:         either to sentence him to death or to impose on him sentence         of  imprisonment for life.  It the Sessions Court  had,  in-         stead of sentencing him to death, imposed on him sentence of         life  imprisonment, the appellant could have made no  griev-         ance  of  the  breach of the provision  of  section  235(2),         because,  even  after hearing the  appellant,  the  Sessions         Court  would not have passed a sentence more  favourable  to         the  appellant ’than the sentence of life imprisonment.   In         such  a  case,  even if any complaint of  violation  of  the         requirement of section 235 (2) were made, ’it would not have         been  entertained  by the appellate court as it  would  have         been meaningless and futile. But, in the _present case,  the         Sessions Court chose to inflict death sentence on the appel-         lant  and  the possibility cannot be ruled out that  if  the         accused  had been given opportunity to produce material  and         make submissions on the question of sentence, as contemplat-         ed  by section 235(2), he might have been able  to  persuade         the  Sessions  Court to impose the lesser  penalty  of  life         imprisonment.   The breach of the mandatory  requirement  of         section  235(2) cannot, in the circumstances, be ignored  as         inconsequential and it must be held to vitiate the  sentence         of death imposed by the Sessions Court.

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           It  was, however, contended on behalf of the State  that         non-compliance  with  the mandatory requirement  of  section         235(2) was a mere irregularity curable under section 465  of         the  Code of Criminal Procedure. 1973 as no failure of  jus-         tice  was occasioned by it and the trial could not  on  that         account be held to be bad.  The State leaned heavily on  the         fact  that the appellant did not insist on his right  to  be         heard  under section 235(2) before the Sessions  Court,  nor         did  he  make any complaint before the High Court  that  the         Sessions Court had committed a breach of section 235(2)  and         this  omission on the part of the appellant,  contended  the         State,  showed that he had nothing to say in regard  to  the         question  of  sentence and consequently,  no  prejudice  was         suffered  by him as a result of non-compliance with  section         235(2). This contention is, in my opinion, without force and         must be rejected. It must be remembered that section  235(2)         is a new provision intro-         236         duced for the first time in the Code of Criminal  Procedure,         and  1973  and it is quite possible that  many  lawyers  and         judges  might be unaware of it. Before the  Sessions  Court,         the  appellant was not represented by a lawyer at  the  time         when the judgment was pronounced and obviously he could  not         be aware of this new stage in the trial provided by  section         235(2).  Even the Sessions Judge was not aware of it, for it         is reasonable to assume that if he had been aware, he  would         have  informed the appellant about his right to be heard  in         regard  to the sentence and given him an opportunity  to  be         heard.   It is unfortunate that in our country there  is  no         system of continuing education for judges so that judges can         remain  fully informed about the latest developments in  the         law  and acquire familiarity with modern methods  and  tech-         niques  of judicial decision-making.  The world is  changing         fast  and  in  our own country,  vast  social  and  economic         changes  are taking place.  There is a revolution of  rising         expectation amongst millions of human beings who have so far         been  consigned  to a life of abject  poverty,  hunger  .and         destitution.   Law has, for the first time, adopted a  posi-         tive  approach  and come out openly in the  service  of  the         weaker  sections  of  the community.  It has  ceased  to  be         merely  an  instrument providing a framework of  freedom  in         which  men may work out their destinies.  It has acquired  a         new  dimension,  a dynamic activism and it is  now  directed         towards  achieving socio-economic justice which  encompasses         not merely a few privileged classes but the large masses  of         our  people  who  have  so  far  been  denied  freedom   and         equality-social as well as economic--and who have nothing to         hope  for and to live for.  Law strives to give them  social         and  economic justice and it has, therefore, necessarily  to         be weighted in favour of the weak and the exposed.  This  is         the  new law which judges are now called upon to  administer         and  it  is, therefore, essential that they  should  receive         proper  training which  would bring about an  orientation in         their   approach and outlook, stimulate sympathies  in  them         for  the vulnerable sections of the community and  inject  a         new awareness and sense of public commitment in them.   They         should  also be educated in the new trends in  penology  and         sentencing  procedures so that they may learn to  use  penal         law as a tool for reforming and rehabilitating criminals and         smoothening out the uneven texture of the social fabric  and         not  as a weapon, fashioned by law, for protecting and  per-         petuating the hegemony of one class over the other.  Be that         as  it may, it is clear that the learned Sessions Judge  was         not aware of the provision in section 235(2) and so also was         the lawyer of the appellant in the High Court unaware of it.

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       No  inference can, therefore, be drawn from the omission  of         the  appellant to raise this point, that he had  nothing  to         Say  in  regard  to the sentence and  that  consequently  no         prejudice was caused to him.             So far as section 465 of the Code of Criminal Procedure,         1973 is concerned, I do not think it can avail the State  in         the  present ease. In the first place,  non-compliance  with         the  requirement  of section 235(2) cannot be  described  as         mere  irregularity in the course of the trial curable  under         section  465.  It is much more serious.  It amounts  to  by-         passing  an  important stage of the trial  and  omitting  it         altogether,  so  that  the trial cannot be aid  to  be  that         contemplated in the Code. It         237         is a different kind of trial conducted in a manner different         from  that prescribed by the Code.  This  deviation  consti-         tutes disobedience to an express provision of the Code as to         the  mode of trial, and as pointed out by the Judicial  Com-         mittee  of  the  Privy Council in Subramania  Iyer  v.  King         Emperor(1),  such a deviation cannot be regarded as  a  mere         irregularity.   It goes to the root of the matters  and  the         resulting illegality is of such a character that it vitiates         the sentence.  Vide Pulukurti Kotayya v. King Emperor(2) and         Magga  & Anr. v. State of Rajasthan.(3)  Secondly,  when  no         opportunity  has  been  given to the  appellant  to  produce         material  and make submissions in regard to the sentence  to         be  imposed on him, failure of justice must be  regarded  as         implicit.   Section 465 cannot, in the  circumstances,  have         any application in a case like the present.             I accordingly allow the appeal and whilst not  interfer-         ing  with the conviction of the appellant under section  302         of  the Indian Penal Code, set aside the sentence  of  death         and remand the case to the Sessions Court with a   direction         to pass appropriate  sentence after giving an opportunity to         the  appellant  to  be heard in regard to  the  question  of         sentence in accordance with the provision of section 235 (2)         as interpreted by me.               FAZAL ALI, J.--I entirely agree with the judgment pro-         posed  by my learned brother Bhagwati, J., and I am  at  one         with the views expressed by him in his judgment, but I would         like  to add a few lines of my own to highlight some  impor-         tant aspects of the question involved in this appeal.             In this appeal by special leave which is confined   only         to  the question of sentence an interesting question of  law         arises  as  to  the interpretation of the provisions  of  s.         235(2) of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973---hereniafter         after  referred to as ’the 1973 Code’. In the light  of  the         arguments advanced before us by the parties the question may         be framed thus:                        "Does  the non-compliance  with  the   provi-                  sions  of    s. 235(2) of the 1973 Code vitiate the                  sentence passed by    the Court?"         In  order  to answer this question it may  be  necessary  to         trace   the  historical background and  the  social  setting         under which s. 235(2) was inserted for the first time in the         1973 Code.  It would appear that the 1973 Code was based  on         a good deal of research done  by several authorities includ-         ing  the Law Commission which made  several  recommendations         for revolutionary changes in the provisions of the  previous         Code  so  as to make the 1973 Code in  consonance  with  the         growing  needs  of  the society and in order  to  solve  the         social  problems  of the people.  Apart from  introducing  a         number  of changes in the procedure, new rights  and  powers         were  conferred on the Courts or sometimes even on  the  ac-         cused.  For instance, a provision for anticipatory bail  was

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       introduced to enable the, accused to be saved from           (1) (1901) 28 I.A. 257.           (2) (1947) 74 I.A. 65.           (3) [1953] S.C.R. 973 at pp. 983-984.         238         unnecessary harassment.  In its 48th Report the Law  Commis-         sion,. while recommending the insertion of a provision which         would  enable the accused to make a  representation  against         the sentence to be imposed after the judgment of  conviction         had been passed, observed as follows:                        "It is now being increasingly recognised that                  a  rational  and consistent sentencing  policy  re-                  quires the removal  of several deficiencies in  the                  present system.  One such deficiency is the lack of                  comprehensive information as to characteristics and                  background of the offender."                        "We  are of the view that the taking of  evi-                  dence as to the circumstances relevant to  sentenc-                  ing should be encouraged, and both the  prosecution                  and the accused should be allowed to co-operate  in                  the process."                  In  the  aims and objects of 1973 Code  which  have                  been  given clause by clause, a reference  to  this                  particular provision has been made thus;                        "If  the judgment is one of  conviction,  the                  accused  will be given an opportunity to  make  his                  representation, if any, on the punishment  proposed                  to  be  awarded and such  representation  shall  be                  taken  into consideration before imposing the  sen-                  tence.   This last provision has been made  because                  it  may  happen  that the  accused  may  have  some                  grounds  to  urge for giving him  consideration  in                  regard  to  the  sentence such as that  he  is  the                  bread-winner  of the family of which the Court  may                  not be made aware during the trial."                  Para 6(d)  of the statement of objects and  reasons                  of the 1973 Code’ runs thus:                        "6.  Some of the more important  changes  in-                  tended  to provide relief to the  poorer   sections                  of  the  community are :--                  "(d)  the accused will be given an  opportunity  to                  make         representation against the  punishment                  before it is imposed.’’         The statement of objects and reasons further indicates  that         the  recommendations  of the Law  Commission  were  examined         carefully keeping in view, among others, the principle  that         "an  accused  person should get a fair trial  in  accordance         with the accepted principles of natural justice".  In  these         circumstances,  therefore, I feel that the provisions of  s.         235  (2) are very salutary and contain one of  the  cardinal         features  of natural justice, namely, that the accused  must         be given an opportunity to make a representation against the         sentence proposed to  be imposed on him.         239         Section 235 of the 1973 Code runs thus:                        "235(1) After hearing arguments and points of                  law  (if any), the Judge shall give a  judgment  in                  the case.                        (2)  If the accused is convicted,  the  Judge                  shall,  unless he proceeds in accordance  with  the                  provisions of section 360, hear the accused on  the                  question of sentence, and then pass sentence on him                  according to law."         A perusal of this section clearly reveals that the object of         the  1973  Code was to split up the sessions  trial  or  the

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       warrant  trial, where also a similar provision exists,  into         two  integral parts--(i) the stage which culminates  in  the         passing of the judgment of conviction or acquittal; and (ii)         the  stage  which  on conviction results  in  imposition  of         sentence  on the accused.  Both these parts  are  absolutely         fundamental   and non-compliance with any of the  provisions         would  undoubtedly  vitiate the final order  passed  by  the         Court.   The  two  provisions  do  not amount  merely  to  a         ritual  formula or an exercise in futility but have  a  very         sound  and definite purpose to achieve.  Section 235 (2)  of         the  1973  Code enjoins on the Court that  after  passing  a         judgment  of conviction the Court should stay its hands  and         hear the accused on the question of sentence before  passing         the  sentence  in accordance with the law.   This  obviously         postulates that the accused must  be given an opportunity of         making  his  representation only regarding the  question  of         sentence  and  for this purpose he may be allowed  to  place         such materials as he may think fit but which may have  bear-         ing  only on the question of sentence.  The statute,  in  my         view, seeks to achieve a socio-economic purpose and is aimed         at attaining the ideal principle  of proper sentencing in  a         rational  and  progressive society.  The modern  concept  of         punishment and penology has undergone a vital transformation         and the criminal is now not looked upon as a grave menace to         the  society  which should be got rid of but is  a  diseased         person  suffering from mental malady or psychological  frus-         tration due  to subconscious reactions and is, therefore, to         be  cured  and  corrected rather than to be  killed  or  de-         stroyed.   There may be a number  of circumstances of  which         the  Court  may  not be aware and which may  be  taken  into         consideration  by  the Court while  awarding  the  sentence,         particularly  a sentence of death, as in the  instant  case.         It  will  be difficult to lay down any hard and  fast  rule,         but  the statement  of objects and reasons of the 1973  Code         itself gives a clear illustration. It refers to an  instance         where  the accused is the sole bread-earner of  the  family.         In  such  a  case if the sentence of death  is  passed   and         executed it amounts not only to a physical effacement of the         criminal  but also a complete socio-economic destruction  of         the  family which he leaves behind.  Similarly there may  be         cases,  where, after  the offence and during the trial,  the         accused  may have developed  some virulent disease  or  some         mental  infirmity,  which may be an important factor  to  be         taken  into  consideration while passing  the  sentence   of         death.  It was for these reasons that s. 235(2) of the  1973         Code was enshrined in the Code for the purpose of making the         Court  aware  of  these circumstances so that  even  if  the         highest penalty of         240         death is passed on the accused he does not have a  grievance         that  he was not heard on his personal, social and  domestic         circumstances before the sentence was given.             My learned brother has very rightly pointed out that our         independence  has  led to the framing of  numerous  laws  on         various  social  concepts  and a proper  machinery  must  be         evolved  to educate not only the people regarding  the  laws         which have been made for their benefit but also the  Courts,         most of whom are not aware of some of the recent and the new         provisions.  It is, therefore, the prime need of the hour to         set  up Training Institutes to impart the new  judicial  re-         cruits   or even to serving judges with the changing  trends         of judicial thoughts  and the new ideas which the new  judi-         cial approach has imbibed over the years as a result of  the         influence  of new circumstances that have come  into  exist-         ence.

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           The  next  question  that arises  for  consideration  is         whether noncompliance with s. 235(2) is merely an irregular-         ity  which  can be cured by s. 465 or it  is  an  illegality         which vitiates the sentence. Having regard to the object and         the  setting  in which the new provision  of s.  235(2)  was         inserted  in the 1973 Code there can be no doubt that it  is         one  of the most fundamental part of the criminal  procedure         and non-compliance thereof will ex facie vitiate the  order.         Even  if  it be regarded as an  irregularity  the  prejudice         caused to the accused would be inherent and implicit because         of the infraction of the rules of natural justice which have         been  incorporated in this statutory provision, because  the         accused  has been completely deprived of  an opportunity  to         represent  to the Court regarding the proposed sentence  and         which  manifestly results in a serious failure  of  justice.         There  is abundant authority for this proposition  to  which         reference has been made by my learned brother.             The last point to be considered is the extent and import         of the word "hear" used in s. 235(2) of the 1973 Code.  Does         it  indicate,  that the accused should enter  into  a  fresh         trial  by  producing oral and documentary  evidence  on  the         question  of  the sentence which naturally  will  result  in         further delay of the trial?  The Parliament does not  appear         to  have  intended that the accused  should  adopt  dilatory         tactics  under the cover of this new provision  but  contem-         plated  that a short and simple opportunity has to be  given         to  the accused to place materials if necessary  by  leading         evidence  before the Court bearing on the question  of  sen-         tence  and  a consequent opportunity to the  prosecution  to         rebut  those materials.  The Law Commission was fully  aware         of this anomaly and it accordingly suggested thus:                        "We are aware that a provision for an  oppor-                  tunity   to  give  evidence in  this  .respect  may                  necessitate  an   adjournment; and to  avoid  delay                  adjournment, for the purpose should, ordinarily  be                  for  not more than 14 days.  It may be so  provided                  in the relevant clause."         241         It  may  not  be practicable to keep up  to  the  time-limit         suggested  by the Law Commission with mathematical  accuracy         but  the Courts must be vigilant to exercise proper  control         over the proceedings so that the trial is not unavoidably or         unnecessarily delayed.             I,  therefore, agree with the order of my learned  Bhag-         wati, J., that the appeal should be allowed on the  question         of the sentence and  the, matter should be sent back to  the         Trial Court for giving an opportunity to the accused to make         a representation regarding the sentence proposed.         V.P.S.                                                Appeal         allowed.         242