CrPC 432 — Power to suspend or remit sentences

Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973

Statutory text

(1) When  any  person  has  been  sentenced  to  punishment  for  an
offence, the appropriate Government may, at any time, without conditions or upon any conditions which the person
sentenced accepts, suspend the execution of his sentence or remit the whole or any part of the punishment to which he has been sentenced.
(2) Whenever  an  application  is  made  to  the  appropriate  Government  for  the  suspension  or  remission  of  a
sentence,  the  appropriate  Government  may  require  the presiding  Judge  of  the  Court  before  or  by  which  the
conviction  was  had  or  confirmed,  to  state  his  opinion  as  to  whether  the  application  should  be  granted  or  refused,
together with his reasons for such opinion and also to forward with the statement of such opinion a certified copy of the record of the trial or of such record thereof as exists.
(3) If  any  condition  on  which  a  sentence  has  been  suspended  or  remitted  is,  in  the  opinion  of  the  appropriate
Government,  not fulfilled, the appropriate  Government  may cancel the  suspension or remission, and thereupon the
person  in  whose  favour  the  sentence  has  been  suspended  or  remitted  may,  if  at  large,  be  arrested  by  any  police officer, without warrant and remanded to undergo the unexpired portion of the sentence.
(4) The condition on which a sentence is suspended or remitted under this section may be one to be fulfilled by the person in whose favour the sentence is suspended or remitted, or one independent of his will.
(5) The appropriate Government may, by general rules or special orders, give directions as to the suspension of
sentences and the conditions on which petitions should be presented and dealt with:
Provided that in the case of any sentence (other than a sentence of fine) passed on a male person above the age
of eighteen years, no such petition by the person sentenced or by any other person on his behalf shall be entertained, unless the person sentenced is in jail, and—
(a) where such petition is made by the person sentenced, it is presented through the officer in charge of the
jail; or
(b) where such petition is made by any other person, it contains a declaration that the person sentenced is in jail.
(6) The provisions of the above sub-sections shall also apply to any order passed by a Criminal Court under any
section of this Code or of any other law, which restricts the liberty of any person or imposes any liability upon him or his property.

(7) In this section and in section 433, the expression “appropriate Government” means,—
(a) in cases where the sentence is for an offence against, or the order referred to in sub-section (6) is passed
under, any law relating to a matter to which the executive power of the Union extends, the Central Government;
(b) in other cases, the Government of the State within which the offender is sentenced or the said order is passed.

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