In the case of Ritik Rathore vs. State of H.P., the High Court of Himachal Pradesh addressed the principles of judicial sentencing under the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances (NDPS) Act, 1985, specifically regarding intermediate quantities of contraband,. The court modified a ten-year sentence to one and a half years, establishing key precedents for proportionality and the relevance of an accused’s prior record,.
- Core Dispute: Disproportionate Sentencing
The appellant was convicted for being in possession of 13 grams of Heroin. While heroin up to 5 grams is considered a “small quantity,” anything from 6 grams to 250 grams is classified as an “intermediate quantity,” punishable by up to ten years of rigorous imprisonment. The Trial Court had imposed the maximum ten-year sentence and a ₹1,00,000 fine. On appeal, the appellant did not challenge the conviction on its merits but argued that the punishment was grossly disproportionate to the quantity recovered.
- Rejection of the “Mathematical Scale”
The Court ruled that sentencing should not be based on a “straitjacket mathematical scale” derived strictly from the weight of the narcotics.
- Judicial Discretion: Applying a rigid mathematical formula—such as awarding one-tenth of the maximum sentence for one-tenth of the maximum intermediate weight—strips the judiciary of its essential discretion.
- Individual Circumstances: Instead of a mathematical norm, courts must balance deterrence and reformation by considering the gravity of the crime, the motive, the age of the accused, and other attending circumstances.
- Proportionality: A sentence must be “adequate”—neither excessively harsh nor ridiculously low—to meet the ends of justice based on the factual matrix of each specific case.
- Irrelevance of Pending Cases (“Bad Character”)
A significant portion of the ruling addressed whether the pendency of other criminal trials could be used to justify a harsher sentence.
- Presumption of Innocence: Under Section 49 of the BharatiyaSakshyaAdhiniyam, 2023 (formerly Section 54 of the Evidence Act), the bad character of an accused is irrelevant in criminal proceedings.
- Evidence of Character: The Court held that a pending FIR or trial cannot be treated as evidence of bad character or used to enhance a sentence. Until a prior conviction is actually proved, an undertrial prisoner must be presumed innocent.
- Final Modification of Sentence
The Court found that for a recovery of 13 grams of heroin (at the lower end of the intermediate spectrum), a ten-year sentence was unsustainable.
- Revised Punishment: The High Court reduced the sentence to one and a half years of rigorous imprisonment and reduced the fine from ₹1,00,000 to ₹20,000.
Immediate Release: Noting that the appellant had already undergone one year and three months of incarceration, the Court ordered his immediate release if not required in any other case, provided the modified sentence was completed.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 256
Ritik Rathore. V. State of H.P. (D.O.J. 26.05.2026)
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