February 4, 2025
Constitutional Law 1DU LLBSemester 3

Zakarius Lakra v. Union of India (2005) 3 SCC 161

Case Summary

CitationZakarius Lakra v. Union of India (2005) 3 SCC 161
Keywords
FactsThe appellants, in this case, were the parents of a boy who was sentenced to death by the Additional Sessions Judge, Dehradun which was further confirmed by the High Court and further confirmed by this court. The appellant filed a writ petition under Article 32 questioning the legality of the death sentence given by the apex court. The petitioner herein claimed that the boy was a juvenile (D.O.B-04.01.1980) when the offense was committed i.e. 15.11.1994 and produced documents to prove his claims. The petitioner produced two documents issued by the school authority of West Bengal dated 28.04.2001 and 02.08.2002 but these were not brought to the notice during the hearing of the appeal.
IssuesWhether the death sentence imposed on the appellant can be quashed on the ground that he was a juvenile on the date of the commission of the offense?
Contentions
Law PointsIn the present matter documents submitted by the learned counsel that the accused was a juvenile on the date of the crime. It was not known whether it formed part of the relevant record furnished by the Registry to the amicus curiae who pleaded the case of the appellant. It is on the basis of this material that the learned counsel for the petitioners submits that the imposition of the death sentence is not proper.
The court made clear that the learned counsel seeks to modify the death sentence to life imprisonment and documents which were produced can be verified by directing an enquiry by the named authority or Court. In the decision, the court mentioned the judgment of Rupa Ashok Hura v. Ashok Hura that the current petition is not maintainable under Article 32 but the court allowed to convert the present petition into a curative petition after some amendment and following procedure.
Before closing, the Court regarding the age mentioned 20 years as his statement was recorded on 07.03.2001 under Section 313 Cr.P.C. The trial court viewed the evidence produced before him that the accused had a passbook and cheque on 09.03.1994. The High Court noted that the accused admittedly opened a bank account in the Punjab Nation Bank on 09.03.1994. High Court observed that a bank account be opened unless he was major.
The court concluded that the appeal before this court was decided without looking at the school certificate. The court considered the appropriate contentions raised and citation given so
that the learned counsel may receive due consideration in the curative petition taken for consideration by a larger bench.
Judgement The court dismissed the present appeal and allowed to file a curative petition.
Ratio Decidendi & Case Authority

Full Case Details

Related posts

State of U.P. v. Raj Narain (1975) 4 SCC 428

Tabassum Jahan

A.N. Parasuraman v. State of Tamil Nadu (1989) 4 SCC 683 : AIR 1990 SC 40

Tabassum Jahan

State of Maharashtra v. Praful B. Desai (Dr.) (2003) 4 SCC 601

Tabassum Jahan

1 comment

Constitutional Law – I DU LL.B. Semester III Term Paper LB – 301 course contents - Laws Forum November 21, 2024 at 8:32 pm

[…] Zakarius Lakra v. Union of India (2005) 3 SCC 161 […]

Reply

Leave a Comment