The appellant, who was 21 years old at the time of the offense in 1998 and had already served over 23 years of actual imprisonment, challenged his life imprisonment conviction under Section 302 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC). The core legal issue was whether a constitutional court could modify an open-ended life sentence to a fixed-term sentence based on the period already undergone.
The Supreme Court maintained the appellant’s conviction but partially allowed the appeal by modifying his sentence. Relying on robust constitutional precedents, the Court ruled that modifying a life sentence to a fixed-term sentence of more than 14 years is legally permissible and does not constitute an enhancement of punishment. Given the appellant’s extreme youth at the time of the incident and his 23 years, 6 months, and 3 days of incarceration without remission, the Court reduced his sentence to the period already undergone and ordered his immediate release.
1. Factual Background and Lower Court Rulings
The criminal prosecution originated from an incident that took place in 1998. The appellant (designated as Accused No. 2 out of four original co-accused) was tried in Sessions Case No. 33/1998. The Trial Court (Additional Sessions Judge, Vadodara, Camp at Chhotaudepur, Gujarat) found that the appellant had dealt fatal knife blows to the torso and abdomen of the deceased.
The Trial Court acquitted the other three co-accused but convicted the appellant under Section 302 of the IPC and Section 135 of the Bombay Police Act (BP Act), sentencing him to imprisonment for life along with a fine of ₹25,000. On March 18, 2002, the High Court of Gujarat dismissed the appellant’s appeal (Criminal Appeal No. 459/2001), concurrently confirming the convictions and reliability of the three eyewitnesses (PW-1, PW-2, and PW-5), which were fully supported by medical and weapon discovery evidence.
2. Legal Issues Evaluated by the Supreme Court
Issue I: Scope of “Imprisonment for Life” and Judicial Modification
The Supreme Court declined to disturb the concurrent factual findings regarding the appellant’s guilt. It centered its analysis strictly on the limits of sentencing modification. Under the landmark Constitution Bench ruling in Union of India v. V. Sriharan, life imprisonment strictly means imprisonment for the remainder of a prisoner’s natural life, subject to constitutional or statutory remission.
Crucially, V. Sriharan and subsequent clarifications in Shiva Kumar v. State of Karnataka established that constitutional courts (the High Courts and the Supreme Court) possess the inherent power derived from the Penal Code to impose a modified, fixed-term sentence exceeding 14 years. This authority applies even in instances where capital punishment is neither imposed nor requested.
Issue II: Does Reducing a Life Sentence to a Fixed Term Enhance Punishment?
The State’s counsel fairly brought to the Court’s notice the precedent in Birbal Choudhary alias Mukhiya Jee v. State of Bihar. In that matter, it was settled that when a court substitutes an open-ended life sentence (which technically means the entirety of natural life) with a specific non-remittable or fixed term of years (such as 20 or 25 years), it effectively reduces rather than enhances the sentence. Because such a modification is a reduction, statutory mandates requiring prior enhancement notices to be served to the convict under the Code of Criminal Procedure are not triggered.
3. Court’s Mitigation Analysis and Conclusion
The Supreme Court observed that the statutory minimum floor for life conversion is 14 years under Section 433-A of the CrPC. In the present case, the appellant had already undergone an extensive period of 23 years, 6 months, and 3 days of actual imprisonment without remission.
The Bench took two primary mitigating factors into account to lean toward equity:
- The offense occurred nearly three decades prior (1998).
- The appellant was a young man of only 21 years of age at the time of the incident.
The underlying ratio of the precedent acts as a mechanism for proportionality. Imposing a fixed sentence that matches the long duration already served satisfies the gravity of the offense while accounting for the trajectory of the prisoner’s confinement.
4. Final Order
The Supreme Court condoned the initial filing delays, granted leave to appeal, and partly allowed the criminal appeal. While the legal conviction under Section 302 of the IPC and Section 135 of the BP Act was explicitly maintained, the sentence was formally modified to the exact period of imprisonment already undergone (23 years, 6 months, and 3 days). The Court directed that the appellant be set at liberty forthwith, provided his custody is not required in connection with any other legal matter.
2026 INSC 558
Munna Moyuddin Shaikh V. State of Gujarat (D.O.J. 26.05.2026)




