THE
(Punjab Act XI of 1926)
C O N T E N T S
Sections
1. Short title, extent and commencement.
2. Definitions.
3. Establishment
of Borstal Institutions.
4. Appointment
of Director of Borstal Institutions, officers and visiting committees.
5. Powers of courts to pass a sentence of
detention in a Borstal Institution in the case of convict under twenty-one
years of age in lieu of transportation or rigorous imprisonment.
6. Special powers of District Magistrate.
7. Detention of prisoners
confined in the Lahore Borstal Jail.
8. Power of Superintendent of Jail to present prisoner less
than 21 years of age before District Magistrate for detention in a Borstal
Institution.
9. When action may not be taken under section 8.
10. Application of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898 and the
Limitation Act, 1908 and provisions for appeal and revision.
11. No person who has been once detained to be detained again.
12. Release on furnishing security.
13. Enquiry to be made regarding the age of the offender before
the passing of an order of detention.
14. Magistrate to give grounds of his opinion before ordering
detention.
15. Power to release on license.
16. Absence under license to be counted towards period of
detention.
17. Form of license.
18. Suspension and revocation of licenses.
19. Penalty for escape.
20. Incorrigibles.
21. Inmates appointed officers to be public servants.
22. Extra-mural custody, control and employment to inmates.
23. Penalty for introduction or removal of prohibited articles
into or from Borstal Institutions and communication with inmates.
24. Power to arrest for offences under section 23.
25. Publication of penalties.
26. Officers-in-charge of Borstal Institutions to detain persons
duly committed to their custody.
27. Officers-in-charge of Borstal Institutions to return orders,
etc., after execution or discharge.
28. Powers for officers-in-charge of Borstal Institutions to
give effect to orders of certain courts.
29. Warrant of officers of such Courts to be sufficient
authority.
30. Procedure where officer incharge of Borstal Institution
doubts the legality of order sent to him for execution.
31. Lunatic inmates, how to be dealt with.
32. Application to Borstal Institution of certain provisions of
the Prisons Act, 1894; and the Prisoners Act, 1900.
33. How punishment of whipping may be inflicted on an inmate.
34. Power to make rules under the Act.
35. Powers of the Provincial Government to vary age limit, and
to apply the Act to females.
36. Whipping not to be inflicted on females.
[1]THE
(Punjab Act XI of 1926)
[
An Act to make
provision for the establishment and regulation of Borstal Institution in the
Preamble.— WHEREAS it is expedient to make
provision for the establishment and regulation of Borstal Institutions in the
It is hereby enacted as follows:-
1. Short
title, extent and commencement.— (1)
This Act may be called the Punjab Borstal Act, 1926.
(2) It extends to the
(3) It
shall come into force on such date[2] as the [3][Provincial
Government] may by notification appoint in this behalf.
2. Definitions.— In this Act unless there is anything repugnant
in the subject or context,—
(1) “Borstal Institution” means a place in which offenders may be detained under this Act and given such industrial training and other instruction and subjected to such disciplinary and moral influences as will conduce to their reformation;
(2) “detained” means detained in, and “detention”
means “detention” in a Borstal Institution.;
(3) “inmate” means any person ordered to be
detained;
(4) “offence” means—
(i) an
offence punishable with transportation or rigorous imprisonment under the [4][Pakistan]
Penal Code[5] other than—
(a) an
offence punishable with death;
(b) an
offence punishable under Chapter V-A or Chapter VI of the said Code;
(ii) an offence punishable with imprisonment under the Public Gambling Act, 1867[6];
(iii) an
offence punishable with imprisonment under the Opium Act, 1878[7];
(iv) an
offence punishable with imprisonment under the Punjab Excise Act, 1914[8];
(5) “officer” means an officer of a Borstal Institution appointed in such manner as may be prescribed;
(6) “prescribed” means prescribed by rules made by
the [9][Provincial
Government] under the provisions of this Act;
(7) “security for good behaviour” means security
for good behaviour otherwise than for political activities under section 109 or
section 110 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898[10];
(8) “Superintendent” means a Superintendent of a Borstal Institution appointed in such manner as may be prescribed.
3. Establishment
of Borstal Institutions.— For the
purposes of this Act the [11][Provincial
Government] may establish one or more Borstal Institutions.
4. Appointment of Director of Borstal Institutions, officers and
visiting committees.— (1) The [12][Provincial Government] shall appoint any person not being a police
officer, to be Director of Borstal Institutions, and he shall exercise, subject
to the orders of [13][Provincial Government], general control and superintendence of all
Borstal Institutions.
(2) For every Borstal Institution the [14][Provincial Government] shall appoint a Superintendent, and such other
officers as may be necessary.
(3) For every Borstal Institution a visiting committee shall be appointed in such manner as may be prescribed.
5. Powers of
courts to pass a sentence of detention in a Borstal Institution in the case of
convict under twenty-one years of age in lieu of transportation or rigorous
imprisonment.— (1) When any male
person less than twenty-one years of age is convicted of an offence by a court
of sessions, a Magistrate specially empowered under section 30 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure, 1898[15], or a
Magistrate of the first class, or is ordered to give security for good
behaviour and fails to give such security, and when by reason of his criminal
habits or tendencies or associations with persons of bad character it is
expedient in the opinion of the Judge or Magistrate, that he should be detained,
such Judge or Magistrate may, in lieu of passing a sentence of transportation
or rigorous imprisonment, pass an order of detention for a term which shall not
be less than two years and shall not exceed seven years when the orders passed
by a court of sessions or a Magistrate specially empowered under section 30 of
the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898[16], and shall not
be less than two years nor exceed three years, when the order is passed by a
Magistrate of the first class not so empowered.
(2) When any Magistrate not empowered to pass such order is of opinion that an offender convicted by him is a person in respect of whom such order should be passed in accordance with the provisions of sub-section (1) he may, without passing any sentence, record such opinion and submit his proceedings and forward the accused to the District Magistrate whom he is subordinate.
(3) The
District Magistrate to whom the proceedings are so submitted may make such
further enquiry (if any) as he may deem fit and pass such order for the
detention of the offender or such other sentence or order, as he might have
passed if the trial had been held by him from its commencement.
6. Special
powers of District Magistrate.— When any male person less than twenty-one
years of age has been sentenced for an offence by a Magistrate to rigorous
imprisonment, or when ordered by a Magistrate to give security, for good
behaviour has failed to give such security, and has been committed to or
confined in prison and no appeal has been preferred against such sentence or
order within the time prescribed by law and when by reason of such person’s
criminal habits or tendencies or association with persons of bad character it
is expedient, in the opinion of the District Magistrate, that he should be detained,
the District Magistrate may order that such persons shall in lieu of undergoing
imprisonment be detained for a period not less than two years nor more than
three years.
7. Detention
of prisoners confined in the Lahore Borstal Jail.— If it appears to the [17][Provincial
Government] that any male person, less than twenty-one years of age, who,
having been sentenced to rigorous imprisonment for an offence or having been
committed to or confined in prison for failing to give security for good
behaviour, is at the time of the commencement of this Act confined in the
Lahore Borstal Jail, should for the reasons described in sub-section (1) of
section 5 be detained, the [18][Provincial
Government] may direct that he be detained for a period not exceeding the
residue of his sentence of the period for which security was required, as the
case may be, provided that such order shall be subject as regards the period of
detention to any order passed on appeal against or revision of the sentence or
order of commitment or confinement in prison.
8. Power of
Superintendent of Jail to present prisoner less than 21 years of age before
District Magistrate for detention in a Borstal Institution.— Whenever it appears to the Superintendent of a
Jail that any male person less than twenty-one years of age sentenced to
transportation or rigorous imprisonment for an offence or committed to or
confined in prison for failing to give security for good behaviour should for
the reasons described in sub-section(1) of section 5 be detained, he shall
cause such prisoner to be produced before the District Magistrate in whose
jurisdiction the Jail is situated, and if the District Magistrate after making
such enquiry as he may deem proper or as may be prescribed is satisfied that
the prisoner should for the reasons described in the said sub-section be
detained, he may order the prisoner to be removed from jail and detained for a
period equal to the unexpired term of the transportation or imprisonment to
which he was sentenced, or of the period for which security was required from
him, as the case may be.
9. When
action may not be taken under section 8.— No order shall be made under the provisions of
section 8—
(i) until the time allowed by law for the prisoner to appeal has expired or if an appeal has been preferred until such appeal has been finally decided; or
(ii) if an
application made on appeal or otherwise to have the sentence altered into an
order of detention, has been rejected by an Appellate Court or the High Court;
or
(iii) in the case of any
person who has been sent to a Reformatory School in accordance with the
provisions of the Reformatory Schools Act, 1897[19].
10. Application of the Code of Criminal
Procedure, 1898 and the
[20][* * *] Limitation Act, 1908
and provisions for appeal and revision.— (1) Subject to the provisions of sub-section
(2) of this section the provisions of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898[21], relating to appeal, reference and revision and Articles 154 and 155
of the [22][* * *] Limitation Act, 1908[23], shall apply in the case of an order of detention passed under section
5 as if the order has been a sentence of imprisonment for the same period as
the period for which detention was ordered.
(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in section 423 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898[24], when a person who at the time of his conviction was less than twenty-one years of age has been convicted of an offence or when such person on being ordered to furnish security for good behaviour has failed to furnish such security, an Appellate Court or the High Court in the exercise of its powers of revision, may in pursuance of sub-section (1) and the provisions of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898[25], and after making such inquiry as it may deem fit, alter a sentence of imprisonment or an order of commitment to prison under section 123 of the Code of Criminal Procedure to an order of detention, if for reasons described in sub-section (1) of section 5, it considers such alteration expedient, and may alter an order of detention to a sentence of imprisonment or an order of commitment to prison under section 123 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, as the case may be, provided that the sentence of imprisonment, order of commitment, or order of detention, shall not be in excess of the powers of the trial Magistrate or Court.
(3) Any person who has been ordered to be detained in a Borstal Institution under the provisions of section 6 for a period to expire after the term of imprisonment to which he was sentenced would expire had the orders not been passed may, subject to the provisions of sub-section (5), appeal to the Sessions Judge, and the Sessions Judge may either confirm the order or set it aside and restore the sentence of imprisonment or if the order is for more than two years reduce it to a term not shorter than two years nor shorter than the residue of imprisonment to which the offender was sentenced.
(4) Any
person ordered by a Sessions Judge under the provisions of sub-section (3) to
be detained for a period to expire after the term of imprisonment to which he
was sentenced would expire had such order not been passed, may, subject to the
provisions of sub-section (5), appeal within thirty days of the order to the
High Court and the High Court may pass any such order as the Sessions Judge
might have passed.
(5) An
appeal shall not lie under sub-section (3) or sub-section (4) against a
conviction or on any finding of fact but only on the ground that the order
appealed against is illegal or unduly severe.
11. No person who has been once detained to be
detained again.— No person who has been previously detained for
the whole period prescribed in an order of detention or who has been
transferred to jail under section 20 of this Act, shall again be ordered to be
detained.
12. Release on furnishing security.— Any person detained for failure to furnish
security shall be released on furnishing such security.
13. Enquiry to be made regarding the age of the offender before the
passing of an order of detention.— (1)
Before passing an order of detention under this Act the Magistrate, District
Magistrate or Court, as the case may be, shall enquire or cause enquiry to be
made into the question of the age of the offender, and after taking such
evidence (if any) as may be deemed necessary or proper shall record a finding
thereon.
(2) A
similar enquiry shall be made and finding recorded by every Magistrate not
empowered to pass an order of detention under this Act before submitting his
proceedings and forwarding the accused to the District Magistrate as required
by sub-section (2) of section 5 of this Act.
14. Magistrate to give grounds of his opinion
before ordering detention.— When any Magistrate, District Magistrate or
Court orders an offender to be detained, he or it, as the case may be shall
record the grounds of his or its opinion that it is expedient that the offender
be detained.
15. Power to release on license.— Subject to any general or special
directions of [26][Provincial Government], the visiting committee with the sanction of the
Director of Borstal Institutions, may at any time after the expiration of
one-third of the period of detention, or of two years, whichever is shorter, if
satisfied that the inmate is likely to abstain from crime, and lead a useful
and industrious life, by license permit him to be discharged from the
supervision or authority of any [27][servant of the State] or (secular) institution or person or religious
society (professing the same religion as the inmate) named in the licence who
may be willing to take charge of him. A license granted under this section
shall be in force until the term for which the inmate was ordered to be
detained has expired unless sooner suspended, revoked or forfeited.
16. Absence under license to be counted towards
period of detention.— The time during which an inmate is absent
under license from a Borstal Institution shall be reckoned as part of the
period of detention.
17. Form of license.— Every license granted under the provisions of
section 15 shall be in such form and shall contain such conditions as the [28][Provincial
Government] may, by general or special order, direct.
18. Suspension and revocation of licenses.— Subject to any general or special
directions of the [29][Provincial Government], a license granted under section 15 may be
suspended for a period not exceeding three months by the Superintendent of a
Borstal Institution or revoked at any time by the visiting committee on the
recommendation of the Director of Borstal Institutions. Where the license of
any inmate has been suspended or revoked he shall return to the Borstal
Institution, and if he fails to do so he may be arrested without warrant and
taken to the institution.
19. Penalty for escape.— If any inmate escapes from a
Borstal Institution before the expiry of the period for which he was ordered to
be detained or if any inmate absent on license from a Borstal Institution
escapes from the supervision or authority of any Government officer or
(secular) institution or person or religious society in whose charge he was
placed or fails on the suspension or revocation of his license to return to the
Borstal Institution, he may on conviction by a Magistrate be punished with
imprisonment of either description for a term which may extend to two years or
with fine or with both, and his license shall be forfeited with effect from the
date of his escape or failure to return, as the case may be.
An offence under this section shall be deemed to be a cognizable offence within the definition of that term in the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898[30].
20. Incorrigibles.— Where an inmate is reported to the [31][Provincial Government] by the visiting committee to be incorrigible or
to be exercising a bad influence on the other inmates of the institution or is
convicted under section 19 of this Act, or is reported by the Superintendent to
have committed an offence which has been declared to be a major Borstal
Institution offence by rules made by the [32][Provincial Government] in pursuance of the provisions of sub-section
(14) of section 34 of this Act, the [33][Provincial Government] may commute the residue of the term of detention
to such term of imprisonment of either description not exceeding such residue
as the [34][Provincial Government] may direct, and may order the transfer of the
inmate to any jail in the Punjab in order to complete the said term of
imprisonment.
21. Inmates appointed officers to be public
servants.— Inmates who have been appointed as officers
shall be deemed to be public servants within the definition of that term in the
[35][Pakistan] Penal code[36].
22. Extra-mural custody, control and employment
to inmates.— An inmate when being taken to or from any
Borstal Institution in which he may be lawfully detained or whenever he is
working outside or is otherwise beyond the limits of any such Borstal
Institution in or under the lawful custody or control of an officer belonging
to such Borstal Institution shall be deemed to be under detention and shall be
subject to all the same incidents as if he were actually in a Borstal
Institution.
23. Penalty for introduction or removal of prohibited
articles into or from Borstal Institutions and communication with inmates.— Whoever, contrary to any rule
under section 34, introduces or removes, or attempts by any means whatever to
introduce or remove, into or from any Borstal Institution, or supplies or
attempts to supply to any inmate outside the limits of such Institution any
prohibited article,
and every
officer of a Borstal Institution who, contrary to any such rule, knowingly
suffers any such articles to be introduced into or removed from any Borstal
Institution to be possessed by any inmate, or to be supplied to any inmate
outside the limits of Borstal Institution,
and whoever
contrary to any such rule, communicates or attempts to communicate with any
inmate,
and whoever
abets any offence made punishable by this section,
shall, on conviction before a Magistrate, be liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding six months or to fine not exceeding two hundred rupees or to both.
24. Power to arrest for offences under section
23.— When any person,
in the presence of any officer of a Borstal Institution commits any offence
specified in the last foregoing section, and refuses on demand of such officer
to state his name and residence, or gives a name or residence which such
officer knows, or has reason to believe, to be false, such officer may arrest
him, and shall without unnecessary delay make him over to a police officer, and
thereupon such police officer shall proceed as if the offence had been
committed in his presence.
25. Publication of penalties.— The Superintendent shall cause to be affixed,
in a conspicuous place outside the Borstal Institution, a notice in English and
[37][Urdu] setting
forth the acts prohibited under section 23 and the penalties incurred by their
commission.
26. Officers-in-charge of Borstal Institutions
to detain persons duly committed to their custody.— The officer-in-charge of a Borstal Institution
shall receive and detain all persons duly committed to his custody under this
Act according to the directions contained in the order by which such person has
been committed or until such person is discharged or removed in due course of
law.
27. Officers-in-charge of Borstal Institutions
to return orders, etc., after execution or discharge.— The officer-in-charge of a
Borstal institution shall forthwith after the execution of every such order as
aforesaid or after the discharge of the person committed thereby, return such
order to the Magistrate, District Magistrate or Court by which the same was
issued or made, together with a certificate endorsed thereon and signed by him
showing how the same has been executed or why the person committed thereby has
been discharged from detention before the execution thereof.
28. Powers for officers-in-charge of Borstal Institutions to give effect
to orders of certain courts.— (1)
Officers-in-charge of Borstal Institutions may give effect to any order for the
detention of any person passed or issued—
[38][(a) by any Court or Tribunal acting within or
without Pakistan under the general or special authority of the [39]Central or any
Provincial Government;] or
(b) by any Court
or Tribunal in [40][any [41][acceding]
State]—
(i) [42][* * * * * * * *
* *]
(ii) if
the reception or detention [43][in the Punjab]
of persons ordered to be detained by any such Court or Tribunal has been
authorized by general or special order [44][by the
Provincial Government]; or
[45][(c) by any other Court or Tribunal in any [46][acceding]
State with the previous sanction of the Provincial Government in the case of
each such order.]
(2) Where a Court or Tribunal [47][in an [48][acceding] State has passed an
order which can not be executed without the concurrence of a [49][servant of the state], and such order has been considered on the merits
and confirmed by any such officer specially authorised in that behalf, such
order and any order issued in pursuance thereof, shall be deemed to be the
order of Court or Tribunal acting under the authority of the [50][Central Government] [51][* * *].
29. Warrant of officers of such Courts to be
sufficient authority.— An order under the official signature of an
officer of such Court or Tribunal as is referred to in section 28 shall be
sufficient authority for detaining any person, in pursuance of the order passed
upon him.
30. Procedure where officer incharge of Borstal
Institution doubts the legality of order sent to him for execution.— (1) Where an officer incharge of
a Borstal Institution doubts the legality of an order sent to him for
execution, or the competency of the person whose official seal or signature is
affixed thereto to pass the order he shall refer the matter to the [52][Provincial Government] by whose order on the case he and all other
public officers shall be guided as to the future disposal of the inmate.
(2) Pending a reference made under sub-section (1), the inmate shall be detained in such manner, and with such restrictions or mitigations as may be specified in the warrant or order.
31. Lunatic inmates, how to be dealt with.— (1) Where it appears to the [53][Provincial
Government] that any person detained under any order is of unsound mind the [54][Provincial
Government] may order his removal to lunatic asylum or other place of safe
custody within the [55][Punjab], there
to be kept and treated as the [56][Provincial
Government] directs during the remainder of the term for which he has been
ordered to be detained or, if on the expiration of that term it is certified by
a medical officer that it is necessary for the safety of the inmate or others
that he should be further detained under medical care or treatment, then until he
is discharged according to law.
(2) Where it appears to the [57][Provincial Government] that an inmate so kept and treated has become of
sound mind, the [58][Provincial Government] shall, by a warrant directed to the person
having charge of the inmate, if still liable to be detained, remand him to the
Borstal Institution from which he was removed or to another Borstal Institution
within the [59][Punjab] or, if he is no longer liable to be detained, order him to be
discharged.
(3) The
provisions of section 31 of the [60][* * *] Lunacy
Act, 1912[61], shall apply
to every person confined in a lunatic asylum under sub-section (1) after the
expiration of the term for which he was ordered to be detained; and the time
during which an inmate is confined in a lunatic asylum under that sub-section
shall be reckoned as part of the term of detention which he may have been
ordered to undergo.
(4) In any case in which a [62][Provincial Government] is competent under sub-section (1) to order the
removal of an inmate to a lunatic asylum or other place of safe custody within
the [63][Punjab], the [64][Provincial Government] may order his removal to any such asylum or
place within any other Province or within, [65][any [66][acceding] State] by agreement with the [67][Provincial Government] of such other Province or with [68][that State or the Ruler thereof], as the case may be, and the
provisions of this section respecting the custody, detention, remand and
discharge of an inmate removed under sub-section (1) shall, so far as they can
be made applicable, apply to an inmate removed under this sub-section.
32. Application to Borstal Institution of certain provisions of the
Prisons Act, 1894; and the Prisoners Act, 1900.— Subject to the provisions of section 33 of
this Act, the provisions of section 12 and Chapter XI of the Prisons Act, 1894[69] and of sections 35 to 50 (inclusive) and the
rules made by the [70][Provincial
Government],
[71][* * *] under
section 51 of the Prisoners Act, 1900[72], shall apply
as far as may be to Borstal Institutions established under this Act, and all
reference to prisoners, imprisonment or confinement in the said sections,
chapters and rules shall be construed as referring to inmates, Borstal
Institutions and detention.
33. How punishment of whipping may be inflicted on an inmate.— For the purpose of punishing Borstal
Institution offences, whipping shall be inflicted upon the palm of the hand
only.
34. Power to make rules under the Act.— The [73][Provincial
Government] may make rules after previous publication consistent with this Act—
(1) for the regulation, management and
classification of Borstal Institutions established under this Act and the
description and construction of wards, cells and other places of detention;
(2) for the
regulation by number or otherwise of the inmates to be detained in each class
of institution;
(3) for defining
the powers and duties of the Director of Borstal Institutions;
(4) for the
government of Borstal Institutions, and the appointment, guidance, control,
punishment and dismissal of Superintendents and other officers employed in
Borstal Institutions, and for the defining of their responsibilities, duties,
disabilities and powers;
(5) for the
maintenance of records, and the preparation and submission of reports;
(6) for the
selection and appointment of inmates as inmate officers and their reduction and
dismissal and for defining the responsibilities, duties and powers of such
officers;
(7) for the
temporary detention of inmates until arrangement can be made for their
admission to Borstal Institutions;
(8) for the
admission, removal and discharge of inmates and for the disposal of their
effects during their detention;
(9) for feeding,
clothing and bedding of inmates;
(10) for the custody,
discipline, grading, treatment, education, training and control of inmates;
(11) for the
employment, instruction and control on inmates within or without Borstal
institutions, the disposal of the proceeds of their labour;
(12) for the
treatment of sick inmates;
(13) for classifying
and prescribing the forms of education, instruction, employment and labour and
regulating the periods of rest;
(14) (i) for defining the acts, which shall constitute
Borstal Institution offences;
(ii) for
determining the classification of Borstal Institution offences into major and
minor offences;
(iii) for
fixing the punishment admissible under this Act which shall be awardable for
commission of Borstal Institution offences or classes thereof;
(iv) for
declaring the circumstances in which acts constituting both a Borstal
Institution offence and an offence under the [74][Pakistan]
Penal Code[75] may or may not be dealt with as Borstal
institution offence;
(v) for
the award of marks and the shortening of period of detention;
(vi) for
regulating the use of arms against any inmate or body of inmates and the use of
fetters in the case of an outbreak or attempt to escape;
(vii) for
defining the circumstances and regulating the conditions under which inmates in
danger of death may be released;
(viii) for
regulating the transfer from one part of [76][Pakistan] to
another of inmates whose term of detention is about to expire;
(15) for defining
articles the introduction or removal of which into or out of Borstal
institutions without due authority is prohibited;
(16) for the
classification and the separation of inmates;
(17) for rewards for
good conduct;
(18) for regulating
the transfer of inmates from one Borstal Institution to another or to an
hospital or asylum and from a Borstal Institution to a prison or from a prison
to a Borstal Institution;
(19) for
the treatment, transfer and disposal of criminal lunatics or recovered criminal
lunatics confined in Borstal institutions;
(20) for regulating
the transmission of appeals and petitions from inmates and their communications
with their friends;
(21) for the
appointment and guidance of visitors of Borstal institutions;
(22) for prescribing
conditions on which licenses may be granted, suspended, revoked or cancelled;
(23) for the
appointment, powers and control of parole officers;
(24) for defining the
powers and duties of after-care societies and guardians and the conditions on
which financial assistance may be given to them;
(25) for the
appointment of visiting committees; and
(26) generally for
all purposes consistent with this Act.
35. Powers of the Provincial Government to vary age limit, and to
apply the Act to females.— The [77][Provincial
Government] after giving by notification in the official gazette not less than
three months’ notice of his intention to do so may, by like notification—
(1) direct that the provisions of section 5, 6 and 8 shall extend to persons under such age not less than twenty-one nor more than twenty-three as may be specified in the direction and upon such direction being notified, the said sections shall whilst the direction is in force have effect as if the specified age were substituted for “twenty-one”;
(2) direct that the provisions of sections 5, 6 and 8 shall extend to females, and upon such direction being notified the said sections shall whilst the direction is in force have effect as if the word “male” were omitted.
36. Whipping not to be inflicted on females.— Notwithstanding the provisions of clause (2)
of section 35 the punishment of whipping shall not at any time be inflicted
upon a female for a Borstal institution offence.
[1]For statement of objects and
reasons, see Punjab Gazette, 1926,
Part I, pages 579-80; for Proceedings in Council, see Punjab Legislative Council Debates, Volume IX-B, pages 111-12.
This Act
received the assent of the Governor of the Punjab on 22nd July, 1926; that of
the Governor-General on 16th August, 1926; and was published in the Punjab Gazette (Extraordinary), dated 27th August, 1926.
[2]Came into force on 1st August, 1932.
[3]Substituted, for the words “Local Government”, by
the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Order, 1937, as amended by
the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Supplementary Order, 1937.
[4]Substituted, for the word “Indian”, by the Punjab
Laws (Adaptation, Revision and Repeal) Act, 1954 (XV of 1955), section 2,
Schedule I, Part II.
[5]XLV of 1860.
[6]III of 1867.
[7]I of 1878.
[8]Pb. Act I of 1914.
[9]Substituted, for the words “Local Government”, by
the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Order, 1937, as amended by
the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Supplementary Order, 1937.
[10]V of 1898.
[11]Substituted, for the words “Local Government”, by
the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Order, 1937, as amended by
the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Supplementary Order, 1937.
[12]Ibid.
[13]Ibid.
[14]Ibid.
[15]V of 1898
[16]V of 1898.
[17]Substituted, for the words “Local Government”, by
the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Order, 1937, as amended by
the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Supplementary Order, 1937.
[18]Substituted, for the words “Local Government”, by
the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Order, 1937, as amended by
the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Supplementary Order, 1937.
[19]VIII of 1897.
[20]The word “Indian” omitted by the Punjab Laws
(Adaptation, Revision and Repeal) Act, 1954 (XV of 1955), section 2, Schedule
I, Part II.
[21]V of 1898.
[22]The word “Indian” omitted by the Punjab Laws
(Adaptation, Revision and Repeal) Act, 1954 (XV of 1955), section 2, Schedule
I, Part II.
[23]IX of 1908.
[24]V of 1898.
[25]V of 1898.
[26]Substituted, for the words “Local Government”, by
the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Order, 1937, as amended by
the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Supplementary Order, 1937.
[27]Substituted, for the words
“servant of the Crown” by the West Pakistan Laws (Adaptation) Order, 1964,
section 2(1) Schedule Pt.II, which were previously substituted, for the words
“Government Officer”, by the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws)
Order, 1937, as amended by the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws)
Supplementary Order, 1937.
[28]Substituted, for the words “Local Government”, by
the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Order, 1937, as amended by
the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Supplementary Order, 1937.
[29]Substituted, for the words “Local Government”, by
the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Order, 1937, as amended by
the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Supplementary Order, 1937.
[30]V of 1898.
[31]Substituted, for the words “Local Government”, by
the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Order, 1937, as amended by
the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Supplementary Order, 1937.
[32]Ibid.
[33]Substituted, for the words “Local Government”, by
the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Order, 1937, as amended by
the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Supplementary Order, 1937.
[34]Ibid.
[35]Substituted, for the word “Indian”, by the Punjab
Laws (Adaptation, Revision and Repeal) Act, 1954 (XV of 1955), section 2,
Schedule I, Part II.
[36]XLV of 1860.
[37]Substituted, for the words “the Vernacular”, by the
Punjab Laws (Adaptation, Revision and Repeal) Act, 1954 (XV of 1955), section 2
Schedule I, Part II.
[38]Substituted, by the West
Pakistan Laws (Adaptation) Order, 1964., section 2 (I) Schedule Pt.II.
[39]Now ‘Federal’, see
Federal Adaptation of Laws Order, 1975 (P.O. 4 of 1975).
[40]Substituted, for the words “the territories of any
Native Prince or State in India”, by the Government of India (Adaptation of
Indian Laws) Order, 1937, as amended by the Government of India (Adaptation of
Indian Laws) Supplementary Order, 1937.
[41]Substituted, for the word “Indian” by the Punjab
Laws (Adaptation, Revision and Repeal) Act, 1954 (XV of 1955), section 2,
Schedule I, Part II.
[42]Deleted by the West Pakistan Laws (Adaptation)
Order, 1964, section 2 (1) Schedule Pt. II.
[43]Substituted ibid.,
for the word “Province” which was previously substituted, for the words “
in British India or in any Province of British India”, by the Government of
India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Order, 1937, as amended by the Government of
India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Supplementary Order, 1937.
[44]Substituted, for the words “by
the Governor-General in Council or the Local Government, as the case may be”,
by the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Order, 1937, as amended
by the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Supplementary Order,
1937.
[45]Substituted ibid.
[46]Substituted, for the word “Indian”, by the Punjab
Laws (Adaptation, Revision and Repeal) Act, 1954 (XV of 1955), section 2,
Schedule I, Part II.
[47]Substituted by
the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Order, 1937, as amended by
the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Supplementary Order, 1937, for
the words “of such a Native Prince or State”.
[48]Substituted, for the word “Indian” by the Punjab
Laws (Adaptation, Revision and Repeal) Act, 1954 (XV of 1955), section 2,
Schedule I. Part II.
[49]Substituted, for the words
“officer of the Crown”, by West Pakistan Laws (Adaptation) Order, 1964, section
2(1) Schedule Pt. II, which were previously substituted, for the words “British
Government”, by the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Order,
1937, as amended by the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws)
Supplementary Order, 1937.
[50]Substituted, for the words “Governor-General in
Council”, by the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Order, 1937,
as amended by the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Supplementary
Order, 1937. Now ‘Federal’, see
Federal Adaptation of Laws Order, 1975 (P.O. 4 of 1975).
[51]The words “or the Crown Representative”, omitted by
the Punjab Laws (Adaptation, Revision and Repeal) Act, 1954 (XV of 1955), section
2, Schedule I, Part II.
[52]Substituted, for the words “Local Government”, by
the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Order, 1937, as amended by
the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Supplementary Order, 1937.
[53]Ibid.
[54]Ibid.
[55]Substituted, for the word “Province”, by the West
Pakistan Laws (Adaptation) Order, 1964, section 2(1) Schedule Pt.II.
[56]Substituted, for the words “Local Government”, by
the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Order, 1937, as amended by
the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Supplementary Order, 1937.
[57]Ibid.
[58]Ibid.
[59]Substituted, for the word “Province”, by the West
Pakistan Laws (Adaptation) Order, 1964, section 2(1) Schedule Pt. II.
[60]The word, “Indian”, omitted by the Punjab Laws
(Adaptation, Revision and Repeal) Act, 1954 (XV of 1955), section 2, Schedule
I.
[61]IV of 1912.
[62]Substituted, for the words “Local Government”, by
the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Order, 1937, as amended by
the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Supplementary Order, 1937.
[63]Substituted, for the word “Province”, by the West
Pakistan Laws (Adaptation)Order, 1964, section 2(1) Schedule Pt. II.
[64]Substituted, for the words “Local Government”, by
the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Order, 1937, as amended by
the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Supplementary Order, 1937.
[65]Substituted ibid.,
for the words “the territories of any Native Prince or State in India”.
[66]Substituted, for the word “Indian”, by Punjab Act
the Punjab Laws (Adaptation, Revision and Repeal) Act, 1954 (XV of 1955),
section 2, Schedule I, Part II.
[67]Substituted, for the words “Local Government”, by
the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Order, 1937, as amended by
the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Supplementary Order, 1937.
[68]Substituted ibid.,
for the words “such Native Prince or State”.
[69]IX of 1894.
[70]Substituted, for the words “Local Government”, by
the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Order, 1937, as amended by
the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Supplementary Order, 1937.
[71]The words “or the Governor-General” omitted, ibid.
[72]III of 1900.
[73]Substituted, for the words “Local Government”, by
the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Order, 1937, as amended by
the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Supplementary Order, 1937.
[74]Substituted, for the word “Indian”, by the Punjab
Laws (Adaptation, Revision and Repeal) Act, 1954 (XV of 1955), section 2,
Schedule I, Part II.
[75]XLV of 1860.
[76]Substituted, for the words “the Provinces and the
Capital of the Federation”, by W.P. Laws (Adaptation) Order 1964, section
2(1)Schedule Pt. II, which were previously substituted, for the words “British
India”, by the Punjab Laws (Adaptation, Revision and Repeal) Act, 1954 (XV of
1955), section 2, Schedule I, Part II.
[77]Substituted, for the words “Local Government”, by
the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Order, 1937, as amended by
the Government of India (Adaptation of Indian Laws) Supplementary Order, 1937.