| THE
PRISONS ACT.
CONTENTS.
CHAPTER I.
PRELIMINARY.
Sections.
1-2. * * * *
3. Definitions.
CHAPTER II.
MAINTENANCE AND OFFICERS OF PRISONS.
4. Accommodation for prisoners.
5. Inspector General.
6. Officers of prisons.
7. Temporary accommodation for prisoners.
CHAPTER III.
DUTIES OF OFFICERS.
Generally.
8. Control amid duties of officers of prisons.
9. Officers not to have business dealings with prisoners.
10. Officers not to be interested in prison-contracts.
Superintendent.
11. Superintendent.
12. Records to be kept by Superintendent.
Medical Officer.
13. Duties of Medical Officer.
14. Medical Officer to report in certain cases,
15. Report on death of prisoner,
Jailer.
16. Jailer.
17. Jailer to give notice of death of prisoner.
18. Responsibility of Jailer.
19. Jailer to be present at night.
20. Powers of Deputy and Assistant Jailers.
Subordinate Officers.
21. Duties of gate-keeper.
22. Subordinate officers not to be absent without leave.
23. Convict officers.
CHAPTER IV.
ADMISSION, REMOVAL AND DISCFIARGE OF PRISONERS.
24. Prisoners to be examined on admission.
25. Effects of prisoners.
26. Removal and discharge of prisoners.
CHAPTER V.
DISCIPLINE OF PRISONERS.
27. Separation of prisoners,
28. Association and segregation of prisoners.
29. Solitary confinement.
30. Prisoners under sentence of death.
CHAPTER VI.
FOOD, CLOTHING AND BEDDING OF CIVIL AND UNCONVICTED CRIMINAL
PRISONERS.
31. Maintenance of certain prisoners from
private sources.
32. Restriction on transfer of food and clothing between certain
prisoners.
33. Supply of clothing and bedding to civil and unconvicted
criminal prisoners
CHAPTER VII.
EMPLOYMENT OP PRISONERS.
34. Employment of civil prisoners.
35. Employment of criminal prisoners.
36. Employment of criminal prisoners sentenced to simple imprisonment.
CHAPTER VIII.
HEALTH OF PRISONERS.
37. Sick prisoners.
38. Record of directions of Medical Officers.
39. Hospital.
CHAPTER IX.
VISITS OF PRISONERS.
40. Visits to civil and unconvicted criminal
prisoners.
41. Search of visitors.
CHAPTER X.
OFFENCES IN RELATION TO PRISONS.
42. Penalty for introduction or removal of
prohibited articles into or from prison and communication
with prisoners.
43. Power to arrest for offence under section 42.
44. Publication of penalties.
CHAPTER XI.
PRISON-OFFENCES.
45. Prison-offences.
46. Punishment of such offences.
47. Plurality of punishments under section 46.
48. Award of punishments under sections 46 and 47.
49. Punishments to be in accordance with foregoing sections.
50. Medical Officer to certify to fitness of prisoner for
punishment.
51. Entries in punishment-books
52. Procedure on committal of heinous offence.
53. Whipping.
54. Offences by prison subordinates.
CHAPTER XII.
MISCELLANEOUS.
55. Extramural custody, control and employment
of prisoners.
56. Confinement in irons.
57. Confinement of prisoners under sentence of transportation
in irons.
58. Prisoners not to be ironed by Jailer except under necessity.
59. Power to make rules.
60. * * * *
61. Exhibition of copies of rules.
62. Exercise of powers of Superintendent and Medical Officer.
The Prisons Act.
(INDIA ACT IX, 1894.)
(1st July, 1894.)
CHAPTER I.
PRELIMINARY.
1-2. * * * *
3. In this Act—
(1) “prison” means any jail or
place used permanently or temporarily under the general or
special orders of the Governor for the detention of prisoners,
and includes all lands and buildings appurtenant thereto,
but does not include—
(a) any place for the confinement of prisoners
who are exclusively in the custody of the police ;
(b) any place specially appointed by the
Governor under section 541 of the Code of Criminal Procedure
; or
(c) any place which has been declared by
the Governor, by general or special order, to be a subsidiary
jail:
(2) “criminal prisoner” means
any prisoner duly committed to custody under the writ, warrant
or order of any Court or authority exercising criminal jurisdiction,
or by order of a Court-martial
(3) “convicted criminal prisoner”
means any criminal prisoner under sentence of a Court or Court-martial,
and includes a person detained in prison under the provisions
of Chapter VIII of the Code of Criminal Procedure
(4) “civil prisoner” means any
prisoner who is not a criminal prisoner :
(5) “remission system” means
the rules for the time being in force regulating the award
of marks to, and the consequent shortening of sentences of,
prisoners in jails :
(6) “history-ticket” means the
ticket exhibiting such information as is required in respect
of each prisoner by this Act or the rules thereunder :
(7) “Inspector General” means
the Inspector General of Prisons:
(8) “Medical Subordinate” means
an Assistant Surgeon, Apothecary or qualified Hospital Assistant
: and
(9) “prohibited article” means
an article the introduction or removal of which into or out
of a prison is prohibited by any rule under this Act.
CHAPTER II.
MAINTENANCE AND OFFICERS OF PRISONS.
4. The Governor shall provide, for the prisoners
in British Burma, accommodation in prisons constructed
and regulated in such manner as to comply with the requisitions
of this Act in respect of the separation of prisoners.
5. An Inspector General shall be appointed
for British Burma, and shall exercise, subject to the orders
of the Governor, the general control and superintendence of
all prisons situated in British Burma.
6. For every prison there shall be a Superintendent,
a Medical Officer (who may also be the Superintendent), a
Medical Subordinate, a Jailer and such other officers as the
Governor thinks necessary.
7. Whenever it appears to the Inspector General
that the number of prisoners in any prison is greater than
can conveniently or safely be kept therein, and it is not
convenient to transfer than excess number to some other prison,
or whenever from the outbreak of epidemic disease within any
prison, or for any other reason, it is desirable to provide
for the temporary shelter and safe custody of any prisoners,
provision shall be made, by such officer and in such manner
as the Governor may direct, for the shelter and safe custody
in temporary prisons of so many of the prisoners as cannot
be conveniently or safely kept in the prison.
CHAPTER III.
DUTIES OF OFFICERS.
Generally.
8. All officers of a prison shall obey the
directions of the Superintendent ; all officers subordinate
to the Jailer shall perform such duties as may be imposed
on them by the Jailer with the sanction of the Superintendent
or be prescribed by rules under section 59.
9. No officer of a prison shall sell or let,
nor shall any person in trust for or employed by him sell
or let, or derive any benefit from selling or letting, any
article to any prisoner or have any money or other business
dealings directly or indirectly with any prisoner.
10. No officer of a prison shall, nor shall
any person in trust for or employed by him, have any interest,
direct or in direct, in any contract for the supply of the
prison ; nor shall he derive any benefit directly or indirectly,
from the sale or purchase of any article on behalf of the
prison or belonging to a prisoner.
Superintendent.
11. (1) Subject to the orders of the Inspector
General, the Superintendent shall manage the prison in all
matters relating to discipline, labour, expenditure, punishment
and control.
(2) Subject to such general or special directions
as may be given by the Governor, the Superintendent of a prison
other than a central prison shall obey all orders not inconsistent
with this Act or any rule thereunder which may be given respecting
the prison by the District Magistrate, and shall report to
the Inspector General all such orders and the action taken
thereon.
12. The Superintendent shah keep, or cause
to be kept, the following records :
(1) a register of prisoners admitted
(2) a book showing when each prisoner is
to be released
(3) a punishment-book for the entry of
the punishments inflicted on prisoners-
for prison-offences ;
(4) a visitors’ book for the entry
of any observations made by the visitors touching any matters
connected with the administration of the prison ;
(5) a record of the honey and other articles
taken from prisoners ; and all such other records as may
be prescribed by rules under section 59.
Medical Officer.
13. Subject to the control of the Superintendent
the Medical Officer shall have charge of the sanitary administration
of the prison, and shall perform such duties as may be prescribed
by rules made by the Governor under Section 59.
14. Whenever the Medical Officer has reason
to believe that the mind of a prisoner is, or is likely to
lie, injuriously affected by the discipline or treatment to
which lie is subjected, the Medical Officer shall report the
case in writing to the Superintendent, together with such
observations as lie may think proper.
This report, with the orders of the Superintendent
thereon, shall forthwith be sent to the Inspector General
for information.
15. On the death of ally prisoner, the Medical
Officer shall forthwith record in a register the following
particulars, so far as they can be ascertained, namely :—
(1) the day on which the deceased first
complained of illness or was observed to be ill,
(2) the labour, if any, on which lie was
engaged 0n that day,
(3) the scale of his diet on that day,
(4) the day on which he was admitted to
hospital,
(5) the (lay on which the Medical Officer
was first informed of tile illness,
(6) the nature of the disease,
(7) when the deceased was last seen before
his death by the Medical Officer or Medical Subordinate,
(8) when the prisoner died, and
(9) (in cases where a post-mortem examination
is made) an account of the appearances after death, together
with any special remarks that appear to the Medical Officer
to be required.
Jailer.
16. (1) The Jailer shall reside in the prison,
unless the Superintendent permits him in writing to reside
elsewhere.
(2) The Jailer shall not, without the Inspector
General’s sanction in writing, be concerned in any other
employment.
17. Upon the death of a prisoner, the Jailer
shall give immediate notice thereof to the Superintendent
and the Medical Subordinate.
18. The Jailer shall be responsible for the
safe custody of the records to be kept under section 12, for
the commitment warrants and all other documents confided to
his care, and for the money and other articles taken from
prisoners.
19. The Jailer shall not be absent from the
prison for a night without permission in writing from the
Superintendent; but, if absent without leave for a night from
unavoidable necessity, he shall immediately report tile fact
and the cause of it to the Superintendent.
20. Where a Deputy Jailer or Assistant Jailer
is appointed to a prison, he shall, subject to the orders
of the Superintendent, be competent to perform any of the
duties, and be subject to all the responsibilities, of a Jailer
under this Act or my rule thereunder.
Subordinate Officers.
21. The officer acting as gate-keeper, or
any other officer of the prison, may examine anything carried
in or out of the prison, and may stop and search or cause
to be searched any person suspected of bringing any prohibited
article into or out f the prison, or of carrying out any property
belonging to the prison, and, if any such article or property
be found, shall give immediate notice thereof to the Jailer.
22. Officers subordinate to the Jailer shall
not be absent from the prison without leave from the Superintendent
or from the Jailer.
23. Prisoners who have been appointed as
officers of prisons shall be deemed to be public servants
within the meaning of the Penal Code.
CHAPTER IV.
ADMISSION, REMOVAL AND DISCHARGE OF PRISONERS.
24. (1) Whenever a prisoner is admitted
into prison, he shah be searched, and all weapons and prohibited
articles shall be taken from him.
(2) Every criminal prisoner shall also, as
soon as possible after admission, be examined under the general
or special orders of the Medical Officer, who shall enter
or cause to be entered in a book, to be kept by tile Jailer,
a record of the state of the prisoner’s health, and
of any wounds or marks on his person, the class of labour
he is fit for if sentenced to rigorous imprisonment, and any
observations which the Medical Officer thinks fit to add.
(3) In the case of female prisoners the search
and examination shall be carried out by the matron under the
general or special orders of the Medical Officer.
25. All money or other articles in respect
whereof no order of a competent Court has been made, and which
may with proper authority be brought into the prison by any
criminal prisoner or sent to the prison for his use, shall
be placed in the custody of the Jailer.
26. (1) All prisoners, previously to being
removed to any other prison, shall be examined by the Medical
Officer.
(2) No prisoner shall be removed from one
prison to another unless the Medical Officer certifies that
the prisoner is free from any illness rendering him unfit
for removal,
(3) No prisoner shall be discharged against
his will from prison, if labouring under any acute or dangerous
distemper, nor until, in the opinion of the Medical Officer,
such discharge is safe.
CHAPTER V
DISCIPLINE OF PRISONERS.
27. The requisitions of this Act with respect
to the separation of prisoners are as follows —
(1) in a prison containing female as well
as male prisoners, the females shall be imprisoned in separate
buildings, or separate parts of the same building, in such
manner as to prevent their seeing, or conversing or holding
any intercourse with, time male prisoners;
(2) in a prison where male prisoners under
the age of eighteen are confined, means shall be provided
for separating them altogether from the other prisoners and
for separating those of them who have arrived at the age of
puberty from those who have not ;
(3) unconvicted criminal prisoners shall
be kept apart from convicted criminal prisoners ; and
(4) civil prisoners shah be kept apart from
criminal prisoners.
28. Subject to tile requirements of the last
foregoing section, convicted criminal prisoners may be confined
either in association or individually in cells or partly in
one way and partly in time other.
29. No cell shall be used for solitary confinement
unless it is furnished with the means of enabling the prisoner
to communicate at any time with an officer of the prison,
and every prisoner so confined in a cell for more than twenty-four
hours, whether as a punishment or otherwise, shall be visited
at least once a day by the Medical Officer or Medical Subordinate.
30. (1) Every prisoner under sentence of
death shall, immediately on his arrival in the prison after
sentence, be searched by, or by order of, the Jailer and all
articles shall be taken from him which the Jailer deems it
dangerous or inexpedient to leave in his possession.
(2) Every such prisoner shall be confined
in a cell apart from all other prisoners, and shall be placed
by day and by night under the charge of a guard.
CHAPTER VI.
FOOD, CLOTHING AND BEDDING OF CIVIL AND UNCONVICTED CRIMINAL
PRISONERS.
31. A civil prisoner or an unconvicted criminal
prisoner shah be permitted to maintain himself, and to purchase
or receive from private sources at proper hours food, clothing,
bedding or other necessaries, but subject to examination and
to such rules as may be approved by the Inspector-General.
32. No part of any food, clothing, bedding
or other necessaries belonging to any civil or unconvicted
criminal prisoner shall be given, hired or sold to any other
prisoner; and any prisoner transgressing the provisions of
this section shall lose the privilege of purchasing food or
receiving it from private sources, for such time as the Superintendent
thinks proper.
33. (1) Every civil prisoner and unconvicted
criminal prisoner unable to provide himself with sufficient
clothing and bedding shall be supplied by the Superintendent
with such clothing and bedding as may be necessary.
(2) When any civil prisoner has been committed
to prison in execution of a decree in favour of a private
person, such person, or his representative, shall, within
forty-eight hours after the receipt by him of a demand in
writing, pay to the Superintendent the cost of the clothing
and bedding so supplied to the prisoner; and in default of
such payment the prisoner may be released.
CHAPTER VII.
EMPLOYMENT OF PRISONERS.
34. (1) Civil prisoners may, with the Superintendent’s
permission, work and follow any trade or profession.
(2) Civil prisoners finding their own implements,
and not maintained at the expense of the prison, shall be
allowed to receive the whole of their earnings; but the earnings
of such as are furnished with implements or are maintained
at the expense of the prison shall be subject to a deduction,
to be determined by the Superintendent, for the use of implements
and the cost of maintenance.
35. (1) No criminal prisoner sentenced to
labour or employed on labour at his own desire shall, except
on an emergency with the sanction in writing of the Superintendent,
be kept to labour for more than nine hours in any one day.
(2) The Medical Officer shall from time to
time examine the labouring prisoners while they are employed,
and shall at least once in every fortnight cause to be recorded
upon the history-ticket of each prisoner employed on labour
the weight of such prisoner at the time.
(3) When the Medical Officer is of opinion
that time health of any prisoner suffers from employment on
any kind or class of labour, such prisoner shall not be employed
on that labour but shall he placed on such other kind or class
of labour is the Medical Officer may consider suited for him.
36. Provision shall be made by the Superintendent
for the employment (as long as they so desire) of all criminal
prisoners sentenced to simple imprisonment; but no prisoner
not sentenced to rigorous imprisonment shall be punished for
neglect of work excepting by such alteration in the scale
of diet as may be established by the rules of the prison in
the case of neglect of work by such a prisoner.
CHAPTER VIII.
HEALTH OF PRISONERS.
37. (1) The names of prisoners desiring to
see the Medical Subordinate or appearing out of health in
mind or body shall, without delay, be reported by the officer
in immediate charge of such prisoners to the Jailer.
(2) The Jailer shall, without delay, call
the attention of the Medical Subordinate to any prisoner desiring
to see him, or who is ill, or whose state of mind or body
appears to require attention, and shall carry into effect
all written directions given by the Medical Officer or Medical
Subordinate respecting alterations of the discipline or treatment
of any such prisoner.
38. All directions given by the Medical Officer
or Medical Subordinate in relation to any prisoner, with the
exception of orders for the supply of medicines or directions
relating to such matters as are carried into effect by the
Medical Officer himself or under his superintendence, shall
be entered day by day in the prisoner’s history-ticket
or in such other record as the President of the Union may
by rule direct, and the Jailer shall make an entry in its
proper place stating in respect of each direction the fact
of its having been or not having been complied with, accompanied
by such observations, if any, as the Jailer thinks fit to
make, and the date of the entry.
39. In every prison a hospital or proper
place for the reception of sick prisoners shall be provided.
CHAPTER IX.
VISITS TO PRISONERS.
40. Due provision shall be made for the admission,
at proper times and under proper restrictions, into every
prison of persons with whom civil or unconvicted criminal
prisoners may desire to communicate, care being taken that,
so far as may be consistent with the interests of justice,
prisoners under trial may see their duly qualified legal advisers
without the presence of any other person.
41. (1) The Jailer may demand the name and
address of any visitor to a prisoner, and, when the Jailer
has any ground for suspicion, may search any visitor, or cause
him to be searched, but the search shall not be made in the
presence of my prisoner or of another visitor.
(2) In case of any such visitor refusing
to permit himself to be searched, the Jailer may deny him
admission; and the grounds of such proceeding, with the particulars
thereof, shall be entered in such record as the President
of the Union may direct.
CHAPTER X.
OFFENCES IN RELATION TO PRISONS.
42. Whoever, contrary to any rule under
section 59, introduces or removes, or attempts by any means
whatever to introduce or remove, into or from any prison,
or supplies or attempts to supply to any prisoner outside
the limits of a prison, any prohibited article, and every
officer of a prison who, contrary to any such rule, knowingly
suffers any such article to be introduced into or removed
from any prison, to be possessed by any prisoner, or to be
supplied to any prisoner outside the limits of a prison, and
whoever, contrary to any such rule, communicates or attempts
to communicate with any prisoner, 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.
43. When any person, in the presence of any
officer of a prison, 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.
44. The Superintendent shall cause to be
affixed, in a conspicuous place outside the prison, a notice
in English and the vernacular setting forth the acts prohibited
under section 42 and the penalties incurred by their commission.
CHAPTER XI.
PRISON-OFFENCES.
45. The following acts are declared to be
prison-offences when committed by a prisoner ; —
(1) such willful disobedience to any regulation
of the prison as shall have been declared by rules made
under section 59 to be a prison-offence;
(2) any assault or use of criminal force;
(3) the use of insulting or threatening
language;
(4) immoral or indecent or disorderly behaviour;
(5) wilfully disabling himself from labour;
(6) contumaciously refusing to work;
(7) filing, cutting, altering or removing
handcuffs, fetters or bars without due authority;
(8) willful idleness or negligence at work
by any prisoner sentenced to rigorous imprisonment;
(9) willful mismanagement of work by any
prisoner sentenced to rigorous imprisonment;
(10) willful damage to prison-property;
(11) tampering within or defacing history-tickets,
records or documents;
(12) receiving, possessing or transferring
any prohibited article;
(13) feigning illness;
(14) willfully bringing a false accusation
against any officer or prisoner;
(15) omitting or refusing to report, as
soon as it comes to his knowledge, time occurrence of any
fire, any plot or conspiracy, any escape, attempt or preparation
to escape, and any attack or preparation for attack upon
any prisoner or prison-official ; and
(16) conspiring to escape, or to assist
in escaping, or to commit any other of the offences aforesaid.
46. The Superintendent may examine any person
touching any such offence, and determine thereupon, and punish
such offence by—
(1) a formal warning;
Explanation.— A formal warning shall
mean a warning personally addressed to a prisoner by the
Superintendent and recorded in the punishment¬ book
and on the prisoner’s history-ticket ;
(2) change of labour to some more irksome
or severe form for such period as may be prescribed by rules
made by the President of the Union;
(3) hard labour for a period not exceeding
seven days in the case of convicted criminal prisoners not
sentenced to rigorous imprisonment;
(4) such loss of privileges admissible
under the remission system for the time being in force as
may be prescribed by rules made by the President of the
Union;
(5) the substitution of gunny or other
coarse fabric for clothing of other material, not being
woolen, for a period which shall not exceed three months;
(6) imposition of handcuffs of such pattern
and weight, in such manner and for such period, as may be
prescribed by rules made by the President of the Union;
(7) imposition of fetters of such pattern
and weight, in such manner and for such period, as may be
prescribed by rules made by the President of the Union;
(8) separate confinement for any period
not exceeding three months;
Explanation.— Separate confinement
means such confinement with or without labour as secludes
a prisoner from communication with, but not from sight of,
other prisoners, and allows him not less than one hour’s
exercise per diem and to have his meals in association with
one or more other prisoners;
(9) penal diet,—that is, restriction
of diet in such manner amid subject to such conditions regarding
labour as may be prescribed by the President of the Union;
Provided that such restriction of diet shall
in no case be applied to a prisoner for more than ninety-six
consecutive hours, and shah not be repeated except for a fresh
offence nor until after an interval of one week;
(10) cellular confinement for any period
not exceeding fourteen days :
Provided that after each period of cellular confinement an
interval of not less duration than such period must elapse
before the prisoner is again sentenced to cellular or solitary
confinement;
Explanation.—Cellular confinement means
such confinement within or’ without labour as entirely
secludes a prisoner from communication with, but not from
sight of, other prisoners ;
(11) penal diet as defined in clause (9)
combined with cellular confinement;
(12) whipping, provided that the number of
stripes shall not exceed thirty;
Provided that nothing in this section shall render any female
or civil prisoner liable to the imposition of any form of
handcuffs or fetters, or to whipping.
47. (1) Any two of the punishments enumerated
in the last foregoing section may be awarded for any such
offence in combination, subject to the following exceptions,
namely: —
(1) formal warning shall not be combined
with any other punishment except, loss of privileges under
clause (4) of that section;
(2) penal diet shall not be combined with
change of labour under clause (2) of that section, nor shall
any additional period of penal diet awarded singly be combined
within any period of penal diet awarded in combination
with cellular confinement;
(3) cellular confinement shall not be combined
with separate confinement, so as to prolong the total period
of seclusion to which the prisoner shall be liable;
(4) whipping shall not be combined with
any other form of punishment except cellular and separate
confinement and loss of privileges admissible under the
remission system;
(5) no punishment shall be combined with
any other punishment in contravention of rules made by the
President of the Union.
(2) No punishment shall be awarded for any
such offence so as to combine, with the punishment awarded
for any other such offence, two of the punishments which way
not be awarded in combination for any such offence.
48. (1) The Superintendent shall have power
to award any of the punishments enumerated in the two last
foregoing sections, subject, in the case of separate
confinement
for a period exceeding one month, to the previous confirmation
of the Inspector-General.
(2) No officer subordinate to the Superintendent
shall have power to award any punishment whatever.
49. Except by order of a Court of Justice,
no punishment other than the punishments specified in the
foregoing sections shall be inflicted on any prisoner, and
no punishment shall be inflicted on any prisoner otherwise
than in accordance with the provisions of those sections.
50. (1) No punishment of penal diet, either
singly or in combination, or of whipping, or of change of
labour under section 46, clause (2), shall be executed until
the prisoner to whom such punishment has been awarded has
been examined by the Medical Officer, who, if he considers
the prisoner fit to undergo the punishment, shall certify
accordingly in the appropriate column of the punishment-book
prescribed in section 12.
(2) If he considers the prisoner unfit to
undergo the punishment, he shall in like manner record his
opinion in writing and shall state whether the prisoner is
absolutely unfit for punishment of the kind awarded, or whether
he considers any modification necessary.
(3) In the latter case he shall state what
extent of punishment he thinks the prisoner can undergo without
injury to his health.
51. (1) In the punishment-book prescribed
in section 12 there shall be recorded, in respect of every
punishment inflicted, time prisoner’s name, register
number and the class (whether habitual or not) to which he
belongs, the prison-offence of which he was guilty, the date
on which such prison-offence was committed, the number
of previous prison-offences recorded against the prisoner,
and the date of his last prison-offence, time punishment awarded,
and the date of infliction.
(2) In the case of every serious prison-offence,
the names of the witnesses proving the offence shall be recorded,
and, in the case of offences for which whipping is awarded,
the Superintendent shall record the substance of the evidence
of the witnesses, the defence of the prisoner, and the finding
with the reasons therefor.
(3) Against time entries relating to each
punishment the Jailer and, Superintendent shall affix their
initials as evidence of the correctness of the entries.
52. If any prisoner is guilty of any offence against prison-discipline
which person of his having frequently committed such offences
or otherwise, in the opinion of the Superintendent is not
adequately punishable by the infliction of any punishment
which he has power under this Act to award, the Superintendent
may forward such prisoner to the Court of the District Magistrate
or of any Magistrate of the first class having jurisdiction,
together with a statement of the circumstances, and such Magistrate
shall thereupon inquire into and try the charge so brought
against the prisoner, and, upon conviction, may sentence him
to imprisonment which may extend to one year, such term to
be in addition to any term for which such prisoner was undergoing
imprisonment when he committed such offence, or may sentence
him to any of the punishments enumerated in section 46:
Provided that any such case may be transferred
for inquiry and trial by the District Magistrate to any Magistrate
of the first class: and
Provided also that no person shall be punished
twice for the same offence.
53. (1) No punishment of whipping shall be
inflicted in installments, or except in the presence of the
Superintendent and Medical Officer or Medical Subordinate.
(2) Whipping shall be inflicted within a
light ratan not less than half an inch in diameter on time
buttocks, and in case of prisoners under the age of sixteen
it shall be inflicted, in the way of school discipline, with
a lighter ratan.
54. (1) Every Jailer or officer of a prison
subordinate to him who shall be guilty of any violation of
duty or willful breach or neglect of any rule or regulation
or lawful order made by competent authority, or who shall
withdraw from the duties of his office without permission
or without having given previous notice in writing of his
intention for the period of two months, or who shall
willfully
overstay any leave granted to him, or who shall engage without
authority in any employment other than his prison-duty, or
who shall be guilty of cowardice, shall be liable, on conviction
before a Magistrate, to fine not exceeding two hundred rupees,
or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding three months,
or to both.
(2) No person shall under this section be
punished twice for the same offence.
CHAPTER XII.
MISCELLANEOUS.
55. A prisoner, when being taken to or from
any prison in which he may be lawfully confined, or whenever
he is working outside or is otherwise beyond the limits of
any such prison in or under the lawful custody or control
of a prison-officer belonging to such prison, shall be deemed
to be in prison and shall be subject to all the same incidents
as if he were actually in prison.
56. Whenever the Superintendent considers
it necessary (within reference either to the state of the
prison or the character of the prisoners) for the safe custody
of any prisoners that they should be confined in irons, he
may, subject to such rules and instructions as may be laid
down by the Inspector-General with the sanction of the President
of the Union, so confine them.
57. (1) Prisoners under sentence of transportation
may, subject to any rules made under section ¹[59], be
confined in fetters for the first three months after admission
to prison.
(2) Should the Superintendent consider it
necessary, either for the safe custody of the prisoner himself
or for any other reason, that fetters should be retained on
any such prisoner for more than three months, he shall apply
to the Inspector-General for sanction to their retention for
the period for which he considers their retention necessary,
and the Inspector-General may sanction such retention accordingly.
58. No prisoner shall be put in irons or
under mechanical restraint by the Jailer of his own authority,
except in case of urgent necessity, in which case notice hereof
shall be forthwith given to the Superintendent.
59. The President of the Union may make rules
consistent within this Act—
(1) defining the acts which shall constitute
prison-offences;
(2) determining the classification of prison-offences
into serious and minor offences;
(3) fixing the punishments admissible under
this Act which shall be awardable for commission of prison-offences
or classes thereof;
(4) declaring the circumstances in which
acts constituting both a prison-offence and an offence under
the Penal Code may or may not be dealt with as a prison-offence;
(5) for the award of marks and the shortening
of sentences;
(6) regulating the use of arms against
any prisoner or body of prisoners in the case of an outbreak
or attempt to escape;
(7) defining the circumstances and regulating
the conditions under which prisoners in danger of death
may be released;
(8) for the classification of prisons,
and description and construction of wards, cells and other
places of detention;
(9) for the regulation by numbers, length
or character of sentences, or otherwise, of the prisoners
to be confined in each class of prisons;
(10) for the government of prisons and
for the appointment of all officers appointed under this
Act;
(11) as to the food, bedding and clothing
of criminal prisoners and of civil prisoners maintained
otherwise than at their own costs;
(12) for the employment, instruction and
control of convicts within or without prisons;
(13) for defining articles the introduction
or removal of which into or out of prisons without due authority
is prohibited;
(14) for classifying and prescribing the
forms of labour and regulating the periods of rest from
labour;
(15) for regulating the disposal of the
proceeds of the employment of prisoners;
(16) for regulating the confinement in
fetters of prisoners sentenced to transportation;
(17) for the classification and the separation
of prisoners;
(18) for regulating the confinement of
convicted criminal prisoners under section 28;
(19) for the preparation and maintenance
of history-tickets;
(20 ) for the selection and appointment
of prisoners as officers of prisons;
(21) for rewards for good conduct;
(22) for regulating the transfer of prisoners
whose term of transportation or imprisonment is about to
expire;
(23) for the treatment, transfer and disposal
of criminal lunatics or recovered criminal lunatics confined
in prisons;
(24) for regulating the transmission of
appeals and petitions from prisoners and their communications
with their friends;
(25) for the appointment and guidance of
visitors of prisons;
(26) for extending any or all of the provisions
of this Act and of the rules thereunder to subsidiary jails
or special places of confinement appointed under section
541 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, and to the officers
employed, and the prisoners confined, therein;
(27) in regard to the admission, custody,
employment, dieting, treatment and release of prisoners
; and
(28) generally for carrying into effect
the purposes of this Act.
60. * * * *
61. Copies of rules under section 59, so
far as they affect the government of prisons, shall be exhibited,
both in English and in the vernacular, in some place to which
all persons employed within a prison have access.
62. All or any of the powers and duties conferred
and imposed by this Act on a Superintendent or Medical Officer
may in his absence be exercised and performed by such
other officer as the President of the Union may appoint in
this behalf either by name or by his official designation.
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