GK Question

polity hard mcq

In P. Ramachandra Rao v. State of Karnataka (2002), the Supreme Court clarified the right to speedy trial under Article 21, holding that:

  1. There is a fixed time limit for all criminal trials
  2. No fixed time limit exists; courts must balance nature of offence, reasons for delay, prejudice to parties
  3. Speedy trial applies only to serious offences punishable with life imprisonment
  4. Delay automatically leads to acquittal regardless of circumstances

Answer: No fixed time limit exists; courts must balance nature of offence, reasons for delay, prejudice to parties

P. Ramachandra Rao (2002) speedy trial and reasonable delay: (a) Context: Petition regarding inordinate delay in criminal trial; issue of whether fixed time limit should be prescribed for speedy trial under Article 21, (b) Supreme Court holding: (i) No fixed time limit can be prescribed for speedy trial; each case must be assessed on facts, circumstances, (ii) Courts must balance: (a) Nature, gravity of offence, (b) Reasons for delay (investigative complexity, court backlog, accused's conduct), (c) Prejudice to parties (witness memory, evidence availability, accused's liberty), (iii) Prescribed periods in CrPC are directory, not mandatory; violation doesn't automatically lead to acquittal, (c) Applications: (i) Case management: Courts prioritize old cases, monitor delays, use case management systems to expedite trials, (ii) Fast Track Courts: Established for serious offences (sexual offences, POCSO cases) to reduce backlog, ensure timely justice, (iii) Undertrial review: Periodic review committees release undertrials detained longer than maximum sentence, (d) Subsequent developments: (i) E-courts: Digital case management, video conferencing, e-filing to reduce delays, improve access, (ii) Alternative dispute resolution: Plea bargaining, mediation to reduce trial burden, expedite resolution, (e) Rationale: (i) Flexibility: Fixed time limits may be impractical for complex cases; balancing approach enables contextual assessment, (ii) Justice: Timely justice essential for rights protection, public confidence in legal system, but not at cost of fair procedure, thorough investigation, (iii) Resource optimization: Prioritizing cases, managing delays optimizes judicial resources, focuses on genuine justice delivery, (f) Illustrates calibrated procedural due process: Article 21 interpreted to require timely trial; balancing approach enables contextual assessment of delay, ensuring justice without sacrificing fairness, thoroughness.

Topic P. Ramachandra Rao Case - Speedy Trial and Reasonable Delay
Exam Relevance P. Ramachandra Rao speedy trial critical for UPSC Mains and Judiciary exams