22/01/2026
Sentencing Legality & Judicial Discretion – Key Lessons from the recent Court of Appeal Judgement CA CPA 020/25
Attorney General v. Lanthuwa Hanadige Suneetha Silva
Decided on: 20 January 2026
Bench: B. Sasi Mahendran, J., Amal Ranaraja, J.
The Court of Appeal recently reaffirmed strict principles governing sentencing, suspended sentences, and judicial discretion, particularly in serious drug offences involving mandatory minimum sentences.
🔍 What Was the Case About?
The accused respondent pleaded guilty in the High Court to:
• Possession and trafficking of 1.23g of he**in
• An offence carrying a mandatory minimum sentence of 7 to 20 years’ imprisonment
The High Court imposed:
• 5 years’ rigorous imprisonment, suspended for 15 years, for each charge
• Additional fines
The Attorney General filed a revisionary application, challenging the legality of this sentence.
🧾 What Did the Court of Appeal Find?
The Court of Appeal held that the sentence imposed by the High Court was illegal and not in accordance with law, because:
✔ The offence carried a mandatory minimum sentence, which was not followed
✔ No adequate or clearly stated reasons were given to justify departure from the statutory minimum
✔ The High Court failed to consider the gravity of the offence, including its serious social and economic impact
The sentence was described as “in feris illegal.”
⚖️ Key Legal Principles Reaffirmed
1. Mandatory Minimum Sentences
Where the law prescribes a minimum sentence, courts must follow it unless exceptional reasons are clearly recorded.
2. Suspended Sentences (Section 303 CPC)
A suspended sentence cannot exceed the statutory limit.
3. Judicial Discretion in Sentencing
Courts may depart from statutory minimums, but only with cogent, exceptional, and recorded reasons. Discretion is not unfettered.
4. Gravity of the Offence & Public Interest
In serious drug offences, public interest, social harm, and economic consequences must guide sentencing. Leniency without justification undermines the law.
📌 Outcome
The revision application was allowed.
The High Court’s sentencing order was set aside, and a fresh sentencing inquiry was directed, requiring consideration of both aggravating and mitigating circumstances.