City
Epaper

Five judge SC bench to consider norms related to mitigating circumstances in death penalty cases

By ANI | Updated: September 19, 2022 20:45 IST

The Supreme Court has referred to a larger bench of five judges the issue related to framing of guidelines on potential 'mitigating circumstances' that should be taken into account while dealing with cases where death penalty is under consideration.

Open in App

The Supreme Court has referred to a larger bench of five judges the issue related to framing of guidelines on potential 'mitigating circumstances' that should be taken into account while dealing with cases where death penalty is under consideration.

A bench of Chief Justice of India UU Lalit and Justices S Ravindra Bhat and Sudhanshu Dhulia issued an order in this regard.

The court observed that there was a difference of opinion and approach amongst various judgments, on whether, after recording a conviction for a capital offence, under law, the court is obligated to conduct a separate hearing on the issue of sentence.

The court noted in the order that there exists a clear conflict of opinions between two sets of three-judge bench decisions on the subject.

"As noticed before, this court in Bachan Singh had taken into consideration the fairness afforded to a convict by a separate hearing, as an important safeguard to uphold imposition of death sentence in the rarest of rare cases, by relying upon the recommendations of the 48th Law Commission Report," the court said.

The court also noted that in all cases where the imposition of capital punishment is a choice of the sentence, aggravating circumstances would always be on the record, and would be part of the prosecution's evidence, leading to a conviction. In contrast, the accused can scarcely be expected to place mitigating circumstances on the record, for the reason that the stage for doing so is after conviction.

"This places the convict at a hopeless disadvantage, tilting the scales heavily against him," the court said.

"This court is of the opinion that it is necessary to have clarity in the matter to ensure a uniform approach on the question of granting real and meaningful opportunity, as opposed to a formal hearing, to the accused/convict, on the issue of the sentence," the court said.

The court was hearing a matter initiated by itself to consider the larger issue of considering the process to be followed by the courts in the country while deciding the award of the death sentence. The court took the suo moto on the issue to frame guidelines.

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Supreme CourtSudhanshu DhuliaSeveral supreme courtSupreme court and high court level
Open in App

Related Stories

NationalSupreme Court Issues Notice to Bihar and Delhi Governments Over Minor Girl's Plea Against Forced Child Marriage

NationalThane-Ghodbunder Tunnel: Supreme Court Accepts Maharashtra Govt's Decision to Scrap Rs 14,000 Crore Bid, Big Relief to L&T

NationalCryptocurrency Needs To Be Regulated, Banning Not an Option, Says Supreme Court

MaharashtraPune Porsche Crash: One Year On, 9 Accused Still Behind Bars; Justice Still in Motion

MaharashtraSupreme Court Clears Way for Local Body Elections in Maharashtra, Retains Pre-2022 OBC Quota

National Realted Stories

NationalKin of Chhattisgarh cops killed in anti-Maoist ops to get jobs beyond police department

NationalAir India Crash: Vishwas Kumar Ramesh, Sole Survivor Of Flight AI-171 Discharged; Leads Heartbreaking Final Rites for Brother

NationalKerala mountaineer sends SOS message from Mt Denali, says stuck in storm

NationalSikkim CM meets Himalayan Council of Nalanda Buddhist Tradition

NationalFASTag Annual Pass at Rs 3,000 From August 2025 For These Vehicles; Check More Details