"We will grant you an opportunity of hearing but that should be on practical applicability (of legal proposition). What will happen in future, we don't know," a three-judge bench headed by Justice Dipak Misra said while hearing the revision plea of death row convict Vasanta Sampat Dupare.
However, this court-mandated rule of limited hearing was breached while hearing the plea of Yakub Abdul Razak Memon, the sole death-row convict of the 1993 Bombay blasts case, as the hearing had gone on much longer than 30 minutes.
Senior advocate Anup Bhambani, appearing for Dupare, alleged that the accused was not heard at the point of sentence by the trial court which was a serious legal flaw that needed to be rectified.
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The bench, which also comprised Justices R F Nariman and U U Lalit, asked Maharashtra government to provide requisite documents to the counsel for the convict within three weeks and asked the state counsel to be ready with his submissions on August 31, the next date of hearing.
The court, which had used strong words in its 2014 verdict while upholding the death penalty of Dupare, later stayed the execution of the 55-year-old convict.
Dupare had ravished a four-year old girl of his neighbourhood and stoned her to death in 2008.
The apex court, on November 26, 2014, had rejected Dupare's appeal against the Bombay High Court verdict upholding his death penalty, saying "the injuries caused on the minor girl are likely to send a chill in the spine of the society and shiver in the marrows of human conscience."
The lower court had also awarded the extreme penalty to him.
The apex court had concurred with the findings of the courts below that the case fell under "the rarest of rare category" and the convict would be a menace to the society if allowed to remain alive.
The court had referred to the sequence of events in the case and said the convict, a neighbour, lured the girl, raped her and then battered her to death using two heavy stones.
"The nature of the crime and the manner in which it has been committed speaks about its uncommonness. The crime speaks of depravity, degradation and uncommonality. It is diabolical and barbaric. The crime was committed in an inhuman manner," the court had said.
"As the circumstances would graphically depict, he would remain a menace to the society, for a defenceless child has become his prey. In our considered opinion, there are no mitigating circumstances," the bench had said.