Parveen Kumar @ Parveen Chauhan v. State of Haryana (2026)

By Adv. Amit Singh Rana · 11 July 2026 · Case Note

Parveen Kumar @ Parveen Chauhan v. State of Haryana (2026)

Bench: Justice Sanjay Karol and Justice N. Kotiswar Singh Core Theme: Supremacy of Article 161 Constitutional Remission over Subsequent Statutory Policies; Right of a Convict to the More Beneficial Remission Policy.


1. Syllabus Mapping & Relevance


2. Factual Matrix of the Case


3. Key Legal Issues Identified by the Supreme Court

  1. Constitutional vs. Statutory Source: Whether a remission policy framed under the constitutional authority of Article 161 occupies a higher legal hierarchy compared to a later statutory policy.
  2. Overriding Effect: Can a state executive override or restrict an existing policy flowing from Article 161 by subsequently introducing an ordinary statutory scheme?
  3. Beneficial Application: Which policy applies to a convict when multiple remission frameworks exist across different timelines?

4. The Judgment & Rationale

The Supreme Court allowed the appeal and extended the benefit of the earlier (1993/2002) policies to the convict based on two foundational principles:

A. The Hierarchy of Remission Sources

The Court drew a sharp constitutional distinction between the sources of executive clemency:

B. Entitlement to the 'More Beneficial Policy'

The Bench reiterated a settled principle of criminal jurisprudence regarding premature release:


5. Critical Analysis & Academic Significance for UPSC

When writing answers in the CSE Mains, integrate this case into broader themes of Executive Discretion:

Article 72 vs. Article 161: Both vest sovereign, non-delegable clemency powers in the President and Governor respectively. This judgment solidifies the idea that while the exercise of this power is subject to limited judicial review (as established in Epuru Sudhakar v. State of A.P.), the policies framed under it possess constitutional immunity from being watered down by mere executive fiat or ordinary statutory rules.

Key Takeaways for Answer Writing:

  1. Source Matters: If the state frames a policy under Article 161, it is an exercise of sovereign constitutional grace. If it frames a policy under Section 432/433 of the CrPC/BNSS, it is a statutory exercise. The former always trumps the latter in case of conflict.
  2. Reformative Jurisprudence: By ensuring the convict gets the "more beneficial policy," the Court upholds the reformative theory of punishment, preventing the state from retroactively applying stricter, harsher statutory metrics to past offences.

6. Landmark Precedents to Link

To score higher marks, couple Parveen Kumar (2026) with these classic rulings:

AA
Adv. Amit Singh Rana
Advocate, BCD
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The views expressed are the author's own. Nothing on this page is legal advice; it is commentary and educational material.