Separate Sentences Permissible for NDPS Offences, but Fine Cannot Be Duplicated When Sentences Run Concurrently
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Separate Sentences Permissible for NDPS Offences, but Fine Cannot Be Duplicated When Sentences Run Concurrently
Facts
The Appellant was found in a vehicle carrying 4.1 kg charas and was convicted under s. 20(b)(ii)(C) NDPS Act, along with ss. 25 and 29 NDPS Act. The Trial Court imposed 12 years’ RI with fine under each offence; the High Court reduced imprisonment to 10 years but retained separate fines.
Before the Supreme Court, the Appellant challenged only the sentencing, arguing:
(i) separate punishment for ss. 25 & 29 was impermissible;
(ii) fine could not be imposed twice when sentences ran concurrently.
Issues Framed
Whether separate sentences and fines can be imposed for offences under s. 20, s. 25, and s. 29 NDPS Act arising from the same transaction.
Court’s Reasoning
(a) Nature of Offences under NDPS Act
The Court held that ss. 25 and 29 create independent offences, not merely extensions of the principal offence (Para 6).
Section 25 (permitting use of premises/conveyance) and Section 29 (abetment/conspiracy) are distinct in nature and may arise independently.
(b) Doctrine of Reference
The phrase “punishment provided for that offence” in ss. 25 & 29 NDPS Act incorporates punishment of the principal offence (Para 7). This is “legislation by reference,” allowing imposition of equivalent punishment separately.
(c) Separate Sentences Valid
Since offences are distinct, “commission of these offences… would attract separate punishment and sentence” (Para 6).
(d) Concurrent Sentencing Principle
Where offences arise from the same transaction, courts should ensure sentences run concurrently to avoid “double punishment” (Para 8).
(e) Fine as Part of Sentence
Referring to s. 53 IPC, the Court held that fine is part of sentence (Para 9).
Thus, if imprisonment runs concurrently, fine cannot be duplicated—otherwise it results in unjust double punishment.
(f) Default Imprisonment
Default imprisonment is not a sentence but a penalty for non-payment of fine (Para 9.2), but the fine itself remains part of sentence.
Held
- Separate sentences for offences under ss. 20, 25, 29 NDPS Act are legally valid.
- However, fine cannot be imposed cumulatively when sentences run concurrently.
- As the Appellant had already undergone imprisonment (including default imprisonment), he was ordered to be released forthwith.
Ratio
Offences under ss. 25 and 29 NDPS Act are independent and attract separate punishment; however, where sentences run concurrently, fine—being part of sentence under s. 53 IPC—cannot be imposed cumulatively (Paras 6, 9).
Case Details
Citation: 2026 INSC 332
Decided on: 08 April 2026
Case Title: Hem Raj v. State of Himachal Pradesh
Court: Supreme Court of India
Bench: N.V. Anjaria J., Prashant Kumar Mishra J.
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