The appellant, K. Pounammal, an Inspector of Central Excise, was accused of demanding an illegal gratification of ₹300/- for granting a fresh central excise registration certificate to a factory. The complainant (PW-2), a supervisor at Parani Match Factory, made an application for the certificate, which was under the appellant’s jurisdiction.
The initial demand for illegal gratification by the appellant was on 16.09.2002, and the complaint was lodged on 21.09.2002. Although the complainant initially did not pay, the bribe amount was later paid by the complainant’s brother (PW-3) under pressure.
The phenolphthalein test on the appellant’s hands was positive, indicating the acceptance of the bribe.
The Special Judge, CBI, Madurai, convicted the appellant in November 2003, sentencing her to rigorous imprisonment for 6 months and a fine of ₹1000/- for the offence under Section 7, and rigorous imprisonment for one year and a fine of ₹1000/- for the offence under Section 13(2) read with Section 13(1)(d).
The Madras High Court, Madurai Bench, confirmed this conviction and sentence in August 2010.
Law Involved
The appellant was convicted under Section 7 and Section 13(2) read with Section 13(1)(d) of the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988.
Reasoning
The Supreme Court noted that the conviction was based on evidence, including the positive phenolphthalein test and the proven demand and payment of the bribe, which was upheld by the High Court. The appeal primarily concerned the sentence.
The Court extensively considered various mitigating factors for sentence reduction, drawing upon several precedents.
Prolonged Proceedings and Delay: The incident occurred in September 2002, meaning more than 22 years had passed since the incident. The Court recognized that the “agony of criminal proceedings” over such a long period, coupled with the unreasonable prolongation of a criminal case, constitutes a kind of suffering and mental incarceration.
Appellant’s Personal Circumstances: The appellant is a 75-year-old widow lady. She belongs to a scheduled caste and has been negotiating hardships since her husband’s death. She had become sick and infirm and had already undergone some imprisonment.
Theories of Sentencing: The Court deliberated on sentencing theories, emphasizing that while punishment should be punitive and deterrent, reformative approaches are increasingly accepted in modern jurisprudence. The goal is to nurture the guilt with positivity and reclaim the offender as a law-abiding citizen.
Precedents for Sentence Reduction: The Court referred to cases like M.W. Mohiuddin (1995), Bechaarbhai S. Prajapati (2008), Gulmahmad Abdulla Dall (2015), Rashid B. Mulani (2006), and K.P. Singh (2015), where sentences were reduced due to factors like significant delay in proceedings, old age, health issues, and imprisonment already undergone.
Holding
The Supreme Court dismissed the appeal, thereby confirming the conviction of K. Pounammal. However, the Court modified the sentence. The imprisonment already undergone by the appellant (31 days) was deemed an adequate sentence. The appellant was directed to pay a fine of ₹25,000/- in addition to any fine originally imposed. If the appellant fails to pay the fine, the original order of sentence will revive, and she will be liable to surrender before the authorities.
K. POUNAMMAL V. STATE REPRESENTED BY INSPECTOR OF POLICE
SUPREME COURT: 2025 INSC 1014 (DoJ 21-08-2025)